Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jay Cantor

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Jay Cantor


Role
  
Novelist

Jay Cantor worldbuildinginstituteimagesmadeupeopleweb

Education
  
Harvard University, University of California, Santa Cruz

Awards
  
MacArthur Fellowship, Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

People also search for
  
William H. Gerdts, Warren Adelson, Childe Hassam

Books
  
Forgiving the Angel: Four Stori, Aaron and Ahmed: A Love Story, Krazy Kat: A Novel in Five Pan, The death of Che Guevara, Great Neck: A Novel

Translating kafka susan bernofsky jay cantor glenn kurtz and peter mendelsund


Jay Cantor (born 1948 New York City) is an American novelist, and essayist.

Contents

Jay Cantor httpsmedianprorgassetsimg20140116jayca

He graduated from Harvard University with a BA, and from University of California, Santa Cruz with a Ph.D. He teaches at Tufts University. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with his wife, Melinda Marble, and their daughter, Grace.

His work appeared in The Harvard Crimson. He was on the 2009 ArtScience Competition jury.

Awards

  • 1989 MacArthur Fellows Program
  • Novels

  • The Death of Che Guevara, Knopf, 1983, ISBN 978-0-394-51767-4
  • Krazy Kat: a novel in five panels, Knopf, 1988, ISBN 978-0-394-55025-1
  • Great Neck: a novel, Knopf, 2003, ISBN 978-0-375-41394-0
  • Forgiving the Angel: Four Stories for Franz Kafka, Knopf, 2014, ISBN 978-0385350341
  • Essays

  • The Space Between: Literature and Politics, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982, ISBN 978-0-8018-2672-6
  • On Giving Birth to One’s Own Mother. Knopf, 1991, ISBN 978-0-394-58752-3
  • Reviews

    To call Jay Cantor the thinking man's Tom Wolfe is a little unfair to Tom Wolfe, who surely believes, and with some justification, that he's the thinking man's Tom Wolfe. It's also a little unfair to Jay Cantor, who for all I know abhors Wolfe's politics and his fiction as well. Yet the scope of Cantor's ambition in his teeming new novel, Great Neck; his avid desire to capture the American scene entire; his crowd of characters, each absorbed in a private drama; certain thrillingly compact episodes that stand out like a prodigy among dull schoolkids; the hankering after abandoned tradition (Cantor is fascinated by the cabala, Wolfe by the Stoics); the stern morality operating just below the surface of the narrative -- all these things, it seems to me, link these two writers, both of whom ardently believe in the power of fiction to bring an American moment to life.

    References

    Jay Cantor Wikipedia