Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Chad Harbach

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Editor, writer

Books
  
The Art of Fielding

Role
  
Writer

Name
  
Chad Harbach

Nationality
  
American


Chad Harbach httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Alma mater
  
Harvard University University of Virginia

Education
  
University of Virginia, Harvard University

Nominations
  
Guardian First Book Award, Goodreads Choice Awards Best Fiction

Chad harbach author of the art of fielding on the leonard lopate book club


Chad Harbach (born 1975) is an American writer. An editor at the journal n + 1, he is the author of the 2011 novel The Art of Fielding.

Contents

Lakeland college community book read featuring nyt bestselling author chad harbach


Early life and education

Harbach grew up in Racine, Wisconsin. His father was an accountant and his mother the head of a Montessori school. Harbach graduated from Harvard University, where he became friendly with fellow writers and journalists Keith Gessen and Benjamin Kunkel. He received an MFA from the University of Virginia.

n + 1

In 2004, Mark Greif, Gessen, Harbach, Kunkel, and Marco Roth launched the literary journal n + 1; Harbach had come up with the name as early as 1998. Harbach is both an editor and writer for the journal, contributing essays on environmentalism, David Foster Wallace, and the Boston Red Sox.

The Art of Fielding

Harbach worked on his novel The Art of Fielding for nine years. The novel, set at Westish College, a small school on the shore of Lake Michigan, tells the story of the gifted young shortstop Henry Skrimshander, whose errant throw upends the lives of five people. In high school, Harbach had played baseball, along with golf and basketball; in March 2010, he told Bloomberg News, “What fascinates me about baseball is that although it’s a team game, and a team becomes a kind of family, the players on the field are each very much alone. Your teammates depend on you and support you, but at the moments that count they can’t bail you out.”

After a heated auction ($665,000), the book was acquired and published by Little, Brown in the fall of 2011. A Vanity Fair e-book describing the writing and publication of the novel was later released. The Art of Fielding was met with extraordinary critical praise. In the New York Times, Michiko Kakutani wrote, "'The Art of Fielding' is not only a wonderful baseball novel—it zooms immediately into the pantheon of classics, alongside “The Natural” by Bernard Malamud and “The Southpaw” by Mark Harris—but it’s also a magical, melancholy story about friendship and coming of age that marks the debut of an immensely talented writer."

MFA vs NYC

Harbach edited a book about two American writing cultures, released in February 2014. The book was based on Harbach's widely read essay "MFA vs NYC," and featured essays by n+1 contributors such as Elif Batuman and Keith Gessen, as well as the novelist George Saunders. The Times's Dwight Garner described it as a "serious, helpful and wily book."

Awards and recognition

  • 2011 The Art of Fielding named on New York Times 'Best Books of 2011' list
  • 2011 The Art of Fielding named Amazon's Best Book of the Year
  • 2012 Bottari Lattes Grinzane nominee for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 Friends of American Writers Book of the Year for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 The Guardian First Book Award nominee for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award longlist for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 Library of Virginia Literary Award nominee for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 Los Angeles Times Book Prize nominee for Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 Midwest Booksellers Choice Award for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 PEN/Hemingway Foundation Award nominee for The Art of Fielding
  • 2012 Wisconsin Library Association Literary Award for The Art of Fielding
  • Controversy

    In September, 2017, writer Charles C. Green sued Chad Harbach claiming "large-scale misappropriation" by Harbach. The suit noted a very strong plot and style resemblance between The Art of Fielding and Green's previously completed screenplay, Bucky's 9th.

    References

    Chad Harbach Wikipedia