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Dan Chaon

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Name
  
Dan Chaon

Role
  
Writer


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Nominations
  
National Book Award for Fiction, Goodreads Choice Awards Best Fiction, Goodreads Choice Awards Best Horror

Books
  
Stay Awake, Among the Missing, You remind me of me, Fitting Ends, Await Your Reply

Education
  
Northwestern University

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Dan Chaon is an American writer. He is the author of three short story collections and two novels, including Among the Missing, which was a 2001 finalist for the National Book Award. Chaon's stories have appeared in Best American Short Stories, The Pushcart Prize Anthologies, and The O. Henry Prize Stories. He teaches at Oberlin College, where he is the Pauline Delaney Professor of Creative Writing and Literature.

Contents

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Biography

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Chaon was adopted and grew up in a village of 20 people outside of Sidney, Nebraska. His father was a construction worker and his mother was a stay-at-home mom. As a middle schooler, Chaon wrote a fan letter to Ray Bradbury, beginning a correspondence that continued for several years. Chaon graduated from Northwestern and received his MA from Syracuse. He was married to the late writer Sheila Schwartz and has two sons. He lives in Cleveland Heights, Ohio and teaches creative writing at Oberlin College, where he has worked with such students as Ishmael Beah, Emma Straub, and Lena Dunham.

Reception

Chaon's first novel was You Remind Me of Me (2004). His short-story collections Fitting Ends (1996) and Among the Missing (2001) were both well-received; the latter was named as one of the year's ten best books by the American Library Association, as a notable book of the year by The New York Times, and was a 2001 finalist for the National Book Award. Await Your Reply, a novel published in 2009, was described by the Los Angeles Times as a "riveting thriller, chock-full of plot twists, and a sober meditation on the erosion of identity in the age of technology." Chaon's 2012 short story collection, Stay Awake, was a finalist for The Story Prize.

Chaon's short stories have won the Pushcart Prize and the O. Henry Award (of the O. Henry Prize Stories) and have been included in the Best American Short Stories of 1996 and 2003. He was awarded the 2006 Academy Award in Literature from The American Academy of Arts and Letters.

In a 2017 review of Ill Will, Chaon's third novel, Publishers Weekly wrote: "With impressive skill, across multiple narratives that twine, fracture, and reset, Chaon expertly realizes his singular vision of American dread."

References

Dan Chaon Wikipedia