American novelist
Maud Casey is an American novelist, and professor of creative writing at University of Maryland, College Park .
Life
She is the daughter of novelist John Casey .
She graduated from University of Arizona with an M.F.A.[ 1]
She won a Guggenheim Fellowship .[ 2] [ 3]
Award and honors
Bibliography
References
^ "Casey, Maud - English Department - University of Maryland" . umd.edu . Retrieved 19 September 2015 .
^ "Maud Casey wins Guggenheim Fellowship for creative writing" . The Diamondback . April 27, 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015 .
^ "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Maud Casey" . www.gf.org . Retrieved 2015-08-30 .
^ Sayers, Valerie. "The Lady Is a Temp" . New York Times . Retrieved 19 September 2015 .
^ "THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME (review)" . Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 19 September 2015 .
^ Dancer, Anthony (November 2004). "The Shape of Things to Come (review)" . Stimulus: The New Zealand Journal of Christian Thought & Practice . 12 (4): 46. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 19 September 2015 .
^ Nash, Amanda (July 2001). "Weird and weirder". Women's Review of Books . 18 (10/11): 32. doi :10.2307/4023751 . JSTOR 4023751 .
^ Daum, Meghan (21 May 2006). "Blood Ties" . New York Times . Retrieved 19 September 2015 .
^ "Out Of Footsteps And Questions, Walking Man Makes A Song To Share" . NPR . March 11, 2014. Retrieved 30 August 2015 .
^ Brooks, Geraldine (May 16, 2014). "One Step at a Time" . The New York Times . Retrieved 30 August 2015 .
^ Arana, Marie (2014-03-24). "Book review: Man walks away and into dawn of psychiatry in 19th-century Europe" . The Washington Post . ISSN 0190-8286 . Retrieved 2015-08-30 .
^ THE MAN WHO WALKED AWAY by Maud Casey | Kirkus .
^ "The Sunday Rumpus Review: The Man Who Walked Away by Maud Casey" . Retrieved 2015-08-30 .
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Maud Casey .
Jen Michalski (Apr 24, 2014). "The Asylum of the Heart: An Interview with Maud Casey" . Baltimore Fishbowl .