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Emily Schultz

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Name
  
Emily Schultz

Role
  
Fiction writer

Education
  
University of Windsor


Emily Schultz Stephen King money How Canadian writer Emily Schultz

Books
  
The Blondes, Heaven Is Small, Joyland, Songs for the Dancing, Black Coffee Night: Sh

Emily schultz the blondes bookbits author interview


Emily Schultz (born 1974) is an American fiction writer raised in Canada and now living in Brooklyn, New York.

Contents

Emily Schultz Blonde Apocalypse Emily Schultz Puts a New Spin on the

Emily schultz contemporary solo


Life and career

Emily Schultz Heaven is Small House of Anansi Press

During an onstage interview with Margaret Atwood, Schultz described how her own family settled in Canada from Michigan in the early 1970s when her father deserted the U.S. Army at the height of the Vietnam War. Schultz's father had used a guide for draft evaders and deserters issued by one of her future publishers, House of Anansi.

Emily Schultz Pagelicker 02 Emily Schultz Hazlitt

She is the author of Black Coffee Night, a Danuta Gleed nominated 2002 collection of stories. A story from that collection ("The Value of X") was adapted by Lynne Stopkewich, director of Kissed. In 2005 Schultz published her first novel, Joyland. and was included in a Globe and Mail round table discussion with Sheila Heti titled "Tomorrow's Ondaatjes and Munros."

Emily Schultz Emily Schultz

In 2009 House of Anansi Press published Schultz's second novel, Heaven Is Small. The satirical novel was based on her year spent as a night shift proofreader for Harlequin Enterprises.

In 2014 a glitch on Amazon caused customers to buy her novel Joyland by mistake, believing they were purchasing a novel by Stephen King with the same title. Schultz chronicled her experiences on a Tumblr called Spending the Stephen King Money.

Her novel The Blondes was published by St. Martin's Press in 2015 and listed as a Best Fiction Book of the Year by Kirkus, BookPage, and NPR, who described it as "scary and deeply, bitingly funny — a satire about gender that kept me reading until 4 in the morning — and a fine addition to the all-too-small genre of feminist horror.” In May 2017 it was announced that The Blondes would be developed as an original series for AMC Network's Shudder with Schultz writing.

Schultz is the co-founder of the literary website Joyland: A hub for short fiction with her husband Brian Joseph Davis.

References

Emily Schultz Wikipedia