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David Leavitt

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Nationality
  
American

Education
  
Yale University (1983)

Partner
  
Mark Mitchell (1992–)

Role
  
Writer

Name
  
David Leavitt


David Leavitt wwwenglishufledufacultydleavittimagesleavit

Born
  
June 23, 1961 (age 62) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States (
1961-06-23
)

Occupation
  
short story writer, novelist, essayist, professor

Literary movement
  
Minimalism, Gay Literature

Notable works
  
Family Dancing, The Lost Language of Cranes, While England Sleeps

Notable awards
  
finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award 1983

Movies
  
Food of Love, The Lost Language of Cranes

Siblings
  
Emily Leavitt, John Leavitt

Books
  
The Lost Language of Cranes, The Indian Clerk, Family Dancing, The Two Hotel Francforts, While England Sleeps

Similar People
  
Ventura Pons, Srinivasa Ramanujan, E M Forster, Nigel Finch, Alan Turing

David leavitt the indian clerk june 16 2009


David Leavitt (born June 23, 1961) is an American novelist, short story writer, and biographer.

Contents

Biography

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Leavitt is a graduate of Yale University and a professor at the University of Florida. He has also taught at Princeton University.

His published fiction includes the short-story collections Family Dancing (finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award), A Place I've Never Been, Arkansas and The Marble Quilt, as well as the novels The Lost Language of Cranes, Equal Affections, While England Sleeps (finalist for the Los Angeles Times Fiction Prize), The Page Turner, Martin Bauman, The Body of Jonah Boyd and The Indian Clerk (finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award and shortlisted for the IMPAC Dublin Award). Leavitt, who is openly gay, has frequently explored gay issues in his work.

He is a member of the Creative Writing faculty at the University of Florida as well as the founder and editor of the literary journal Subtropics.

In 1993, Leavitt was sued over the publication of his novel While England Sleeps by the English poet Stephen Spender. Spender accused Leavitt of using elements of Spender's memoir World Within World in the novel, and brought suit against Leavitt for copyright infringement. Viking-Penguin, Leavitt's publisher at the time, withdrew the book. In 1995, Houghton Mifflin published a revised version of While England Sleeps with a preface by the author addressing the novel's controversy.

In "Courage in the Telling: The Critical Rise and Fall of David Leavitt," Drew Patrick Shannon argues that the critical backlash that accompanied the Spender incident "allowed [critics] to reinforce the boundaries between gay and mainstream literature that Leavitt had previously crossed". Subsequent reviews of Leavitt's work were more favorable.

The Spender episode provided Leavitt with the basis for his novella "The Term-Paper Artist".

Adaptations

Two of Leavitt's novels have been filmed: The Lost Language of Cranes (1991) was directed by Nigel Finch and The Page Turner (released under the title Food of Love) was directed by Ventura Pons. The rights to a third, The Indian Clerk, have been optioned by Scott Rudin.

References

David Leavitt Wikipedia