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Thomas E Kennedy

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Name
  
Thomas Kennedy


Role
  
Fiction writer

Thomas E. Kennedy mediabloomsburycomauthorfthomasekennedy211

Books
  
In the Company of Angels, Falling Sideways, Kerrigan in Copenhagen, Beneath the Neon Egg, Getting Lucky: New and Sele

Thomas E. Kennedy at Harper College


Thomas E. Kennedy (born March 9, 1944) is an American fiction writer, essayist, and translator from Danish. He is the author of more than 30 books, including novels, story and essay collections, literary criticism, translation, and most notably the four novels of the Copenhagen Quartet. Of the quartet, David Applefield, author of Paris Inside Out and The Unofficial Guide to Paris series of books, writes: “Kennedy does for Copenhagen what Joyce did for Dublin.”

Contents

The Copenhagen Quartet

After twenty-five years of publishing in small presses and literary magazines, Kennedy was discovered by Bloomsbury Publishing, which offered him a four-book contract, starting in 2010, for his Copenhagen Quartet: four independent novels, with each set in a different season in the Danish capital, and each written in a different literary style.

As an American expatriate who has lived in Copenhagen since 1976, Kennedy has infused the novels of the quartet with a wealth of historical and cultural details about the city. In particular, Kerrigan in Copenhagen: A Love Story, which is set in spring, is a novel disguised as a guide to Copenhagen's serving houses (a.k.a. pubs). Each chapter takes place in one or more of nearly 60 different pubs. Although each book of the quartet may be read independently, Kerrigan in Copenhagen establishes an in-depth background of the Danish history and culture. The New York Times describes this novel as "a spiraling exploration of alcohol, history, literature, art and jazz."

See also The Washington Post review of In the Company of Angels.

Early life and education

Born in Queens, New York City, Kennedy was the youngest of four children. He graduated from Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in 1961, volunteered for the draft, and served in the United States Army in 1962-1963. He spent much of the 1960s hitchhiking around the country and later wrote a collection of essays about his experiences, Riding the Dog: A Look Back at America.

He studied for a year and a half at the City College of New York (1961, 1968), and graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts degree from Fordham University, Lincoln Center Campus, in 1974. He then relocated to Europe, first working in Ferney-Voltaire, France, as News Editor of World Medical Journal (1974-1976), a publication of the World Medical Association. At the age of 32, he moved to Copenhagen, Denmark, where he has lived ever since.

Kennedy worked as head of the international department of the Danish Medical Association, Managing Editor of Danish Medical Bulletin, and from 1976 to 2004 as a translator for the Danish Rehabilitation Center for Torture Victims, now known as the International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRC). While in the latter capacity, he traveled extensively worldwide and completed his Master of Fine Arts in Writing degree at Vermont College (1983-1985) and his Ph.D. in American literature at the University of Copenhagen (1985-1988).

His affiliation with the IRC greatly influenced his novel In the Company of Angels, which is among those from his Copenhagen Quartet. The novel won an Eric Hoffer Book Award in 2007 under the title of Greene's Summer.

Literary career

Concurrent with his work as an international executive, Kennedy taught fiction and creative nonfiction in various short-term seminars and low-residency MFA programs in the United States, including Vermont College (1985-1988) and Fairleigh Dickinson University (2004–present).

He has served as international editor, advisory editor, and contributing editor to various publications, including Cimarron Review (1990-2000), Pushcart Prize (1990-present), The Literary Review (1996–present), Absinthe: New European Writing (2003-2013), and Serving House: A Journal of Literary Arts (2010–present). He co-edits with Walter Cummins two columns for WebDelSol.Com, as well as serves as co-publisher and co-editor with Cummins of Serving House Books.

More than 300 of Kennedy’s stories, essays, and translations from the Danish language have been published in numerous journals, such as The New Yorker online, New Letters, The Independent in London, Esquire Weekly, Glimmer Train, Writer’s Chronicle, and The Literary Review, among numerous others.

Awards and honors

Kennedy’s work has won several awards, including the O. Henry Prize and two [Pushcart Prize]s, most recently in 2015.

In 2007, the Association of Writers & Writing Programs dedicated a panel to Kennedy’s fiction work.

That same year, he won two Eric Hoffer Awards for novels: Winner in Micro-Press category: Greene’s Summer (re-released as In the Company of Angels in 2010); and First Runner-Up in General Fiction category: Danish Fall (re-released as Falling Sideways in 2011).

In 2008, his essay “I Am Joe’s Prostate” won a National Magazine Award

In addition, he has won multiple grants from the Danish Arts Council for his translations from Danish to American English of many poets and writers (including Dan Turèll, Henrik Nordbrandt, Pia Tafdrup, Kristian Bang Foss, Line-Maria Lång, and Martin Glaz Serup).

In 2016, he was awarded the Dan Turéll Prize by the Turèll Society for his books of the COPENHAGEN QUARTET (2010-2014) and his translations of Danish poets and writers, chiefly Dan Turèll. He was given the silver Turèll medal, on the occasion of what would have been Turèll's 70th birthday.

References

Thomas E. Kennedy Wikipedia