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Mischa Berlinski

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Name
  
Mischa Berlinski

Role
  
Author


Books
  
Fieldwork

Awards
  
Whiting Awards

Mischa Berlinski Peacekeeping by Mischa Berlinski

Education
  
University of California, Berkeley, Lowell High School

Nominations
  

Mischa Berlinski - Le crime de Martiya Van der Leun


Mischa Berlinski (born 1973 in New York, United States) is an American author. His first novel, Fieldwork, was a finalist for the 2007 National Book Award. In 2008 Berlinski won a $50,000 Whiting Award, given to writers showing early promise in their careers.

Contents

Mischa Berlinski Innocents Abroad by Phillip Lopate The New York Review of Books

Dieu ne tue personne en Haïti - Mischa Berlinski


Life

Mischa Berlinski Mischa Berlinski Le crime de Martiya Van der Leun YouTube

Berlinski is a UC Berkeley graduate, and previously worked as a journalist in Thailand. His father, David Berlinski, is a mathematician and a noted critic of mainstream theories of evolution. Mischa Berlinski is also the son of American cellist Toby Saks (1942–2013).

Awards

Mischa Berlinski Peacekeeping by Mischa Berlinski

  • 2007 National Book Award Fiction Finalist
  • 2008 Whiting Award
  • 2013 American Academy of Arts and Letters’ Addison M. Metcalf Award
  • Books

    Mischa Berlinski Peacekeeping by Mischa Berlinski Review Books Reviews Paste

  • Fieldwork, (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) 2007
  • Peacekeeping: A Novel, Sarah Crichton Books, 2016
  • Articles

    Mischa Berlinski Read an Excerpt from Peacekeeping by Mischa Berlinski VICE

  • "Woman Marries Snake". Harper's. November 2007. 
  • "Into the Zombie Underworld". Men's Journal. September 2009.  (Reprinted online by Epic Magazine)
  • Reviews

    Fieldwork received widespread attention when renowned author Stephen King's review of it, called "How to Bury a Book," was published in Entertainment Weekly. While King lauds, at length, the novel's complexity, "narrative voice full of humor and sadness," and suspense, he issues a scathing attack on its publisher, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, for poor marketing choices:

    Why, why, why would a company publish a book this good and then practically demand that people not read it? Why should this book go to waste? Is it because there are people in publishing who believe that readers who liked The Memory Keeper's Daughter are too dumb to enjoy a killer novel like Fieldwork? If so, shame on them for their elitism.

    King's review resulted in increased sales of Fieldwork. When Berlinski won the Whiting Award, he attributed it to his "luck" that "Stephen King, the most famous writer in the world, picked up my book because he didn't like the cover."

    In 2007, The New York Review of Books published a positive review of Fieldwork from Hilary Mantel:

    Early in Mischa Berlinski's gripping and entertaining first novel there is a piece of postmodern skittishness which points to a truth that novelists shy away from: their trade embarrasses them. When you first start making things up, you expect that someone is going to tell you to stop.

    References

    Mischa Berlinski Wikipedia


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