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Lauren Grodstein

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Occupation
  
Writer, Educator

Name
  
Lauren Grodstein

Children
  
Nathaniel


Nationality
  
American

Language
  
English

Role
  
Novelist


Born
  
November 19, 1975 (age 48) New York City (
1975-11-19
)

Notable awards
  
Philolexian Prize, Columbia University, 1997; New York Public Library “Book for the Teen Age” list, 2006, for Girls Dinner Club

Spouse
  
Ben Grodstein (musician)

Education
  
Columbia University, Bachelor of Arts, Master of Fine Arts

Books
  
A Friend of the Family, The Flaw of Love, The best of animals, The Explanation for Everyt, Girls Dinner Club

Jillian cantor lauren grodstein laurie r king


Lauren Grodstein (born November 19, 1975) is an American novelist and educator at Rutgers University of Camden in New Jersey, known for her use of male viewpoint characters. Her novel Girls Dinner Club made the New York Public Library “Book for the Teen Age” list in 2006.

Contents

Die buchspione 47 die freundin meines sohnes lauren grodstein


Background

Lauren Grodstein grew up in North Jersey, in a Jewish family, and has family members in France who survived the Holocaust. When she was younger she had an active imagination, and loved to trick her friends and family into believing her made up stories. Grodstein now lives in Morristown, New Jersey with her husband, Ben, and son, Nathaniel, and considers herself to be a "reluctant atheist." She teaches creative writing at Rutgers Camden to a wide variety of students. When she is not teaching, she is writing fiction, including several award-winning novels, and an unpublished book. The novels that she has published are known for depicting the faults of suburbia, especially A Friend of the Family.

Education

Grodstein attended high school in northeastern New Jersey. After graduating, she attended Columbia University, receiving her Bachelor of Arts in English in 1997 and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing in 2001.

Career

In addition to being an author, Grodstein is also a college English professor, beginning her teaching career at Columbia University in New York from 1999 to 2001, and acting as an adjunct professor in the creative writing department in 2004. Grodstein taught creative writing at The University of California in Los Angeles and Cooper Union in New York from 2003 to 2004. In 2005, Grodstein became an assistant professor of English at Rutgers in Camden, New Jersey, where she currently works as an associate English professor and teaches creative writing, modern drama, and fiction and nonfiction courses. She is also a member of the Department of Childhood Studies.

Works

Grodstein has published five books to date. Four of her novels were written under her real name while one, Girls Dinner Club, was released under the pseudonym of Jesse Elliot.

The Best of Animals (2002)

Grodstein's debut is a short story collection including ten stories, many of which share a theme of characters keeping their personal feelings to themselves and rarely saying what they mean. Critics generally responded well to The Best of Animals, calling it "lively" and praising Grodstein's "quirky voice and sassy, ironic humor" which "make these stories come alive".

Reproduction is the Flaw of Love (2004)

Reproduction is the Flaw of Love is Grodstein's first novel, and also her first story told from the point of view of a male character. The protagonist is a man named Joe who reflects on his life, his relationships, and his parents' failed marriage while waiting to learn the results of his girlfriend's pregnancy test, mainly considering the type of bond he would want to have with his own kids in comparison to the one he had with his parents. This novel was described as an "insightful study of our search for meaningful connections” by critic Beth Leistensnider.

Girls Dinner Club (2005)

Girls Dinner Club, written under a pseudonym, is about three 17-year-old best friends who meet weekly to eat, gossip about their lives, and to lean on each other for emotional support.

A Friend of the Family (2009)

A Friend of the Family, according to Grodstein, is “about family and loving your kids. And both dads in the book do.” The novel details the tragic consequences that result when the main character, a doctor named Pete Dizinoff, tries to prevent his college-aged son from becoming romantically involved with his best friend's much older, troubled daughter.

An Explanation for Everything (2013)

Grodstein's most recent book is about the loss of love and belief. The lead character, a college professor named Andy, is still coping with the death of his wife when he agrees to take on an independent study course for a female student with spiritual views very different from his own.

Influences

Grodstein states that literature has been a natural interest for her since she was a child. Though always surrounded by artistic influences, she attributes the development of her literary skills to her grandmother. Grodstein often sets her stories in New Jersey, where she grew up and now teaches college, claiming that her home state has always been close to her life and art. With the release of her novel Reproduction is the Flaw of Love, Grodstein expanded her skills as a writer to the creation of male characters, stating that her choice of mostly male protagonists serves as a way to avoid "Mary Sue"-ism.

Personal life

Grodstein was born on November 19, 1975, in New York City. She was raised in a Jewish family by her mother Adele, a painter, and her father Gerald, a physician. She has a younger sister and a younger brother. She currently lives in Moorestown, New Jersey with her husband Ben, a musician, and their son Nathaniel. She wrote a New York Times article on October 31, 2009, entitled "Take Me to the Election" in which she talks about New Jersey's upcoming gubernatorial election and the challenges of discussing it with her class.

Awards and nominations

In 1997, Grodstein was nominated for the Philolexian Prize, a Columbia University award for literary work. Her novel A Friend of the Family has been selected as a New York Times Bestseller, Washington Post Book of the Year, an Amazon.com Best Book, and a January Magazine Top Ten Book of the Year, as well as a New York Times Editor's Pick. Girls Dinner Club was nominated as a New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age.

References

Lauren Grodstein Wikipedia