American novelist, short-story writer, and essayist (born 1988)
Kathleen Alcott
Born
(1988-10-17) October 17, 1988 (age 36)
Nationality
American
Occupation(s)
Novelist, short-story writer, and essayist
Kathleen Alcott (born October 17, 1988) is an American novelist, short-story writer, and essayist from Northern California. They have taught Creative Writing and Literature at Columbia University and Bennington College. [1]
Career
Alcott has published three novels. The Dangers of Proximal Alphabets (2012), a Bildungsroman, was called "a joyously good first novel" by the Wall Street Journal.[2]
Alcott's third novel, America Was Hard to Find (2019), an epic loosely centered on space travel between Sputnik (1957) and the Challenger disaster (1986), was noted for its "sprawling" historical scope, its multifaceted cultural critique of the United States, and its frank treatment of feminism,[5]countercultural radicalism, and the AIDS crisis.[6]The New Yorker stated that the book "displays a sure-handed lyricism—from the lunar surface, the sky appears 'glossy like a baby girl's church shoes'—but its energy lies in its skepticism about the American century and the parallels the author finds between contradictory currents."[7]
Among their varied nonfiction, Alcott's culinary writing is noteworthy for its mingling of memoir and literary criticism.[10] For The Paris Review she has profiled the use of food in James Salter's fiction.[11] From 2015 to 2018 she contributed a food column to The Guardian,
Style and method
Though described as being firmly in the "realist" mode, Alcott makes strategic use of figurative language to suggest psychological states.[12]Anthony Doerr writes that their “prose […] is always trending away from straightforward clarity toward something more interesting.”[13] In a commentary on the care required to balance this clarity with more figurative language, the narrator of Alcott's story “Natural Light,” a professor of creative writing, wonders
how close a simile should get to the character’s actual life and circumstances: in comparing her inner sadness to the color of her dress, weren’t we depriving the reader of some useful speculative distance?[14]
Alcott's method relies heavily on primary research. For her depiction of a rare neurological condition in Infinite Home, they interviewed people with Williams syndrome.[15] To describe the 1969 Apollo landing in America Was Hard to Find, Alcott conducted what would be one of astronaut Alan Bean's final interviews.[16]
^Doerr, Anthony. “Introduction.” In Anthony Doerr and Heidi Pitlor, eds. The Best American Short Stories 2019. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2019. p. xviii.
^Alcott, Kathleen. “Natural Light.” In Anthony Doerr and Heidi Pitlor, eds. The Best American Short Stories 2019. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2019. p. 32.
^Alcott, Kathleen (2015). Infinite Home. New York: Riverhead. p. 317.
^Alcott, Kathleen (2019). America Was Hard to Find. New York: Ecco. pp. 415–417.