Sari Wilson
American novelist and writer
Sari Wilson is an American novelist and writer. She has written prose and comics , and is the author of the novel Girl Through Glass . Wilson's short fiction has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and has appeared in literary journals such as AGNI , the Oxford American , and Slice . Her essays have appeared in The New York Times , New York magazine, and Catapult .
Biography
Wilson was born in New York City and grew up in Brooklyn Heights . She studied ballet for many years, including with the Harkness Ballet and Eliot Feld 's New Ballet School .[ 1] She attended Packer Collegiate Institute [ 2] and Oberlin College ,[ 3] graduating with a BA in history.
Wilson and her partner, the cartoonist Josh Neufeld , met at The Nation magazine.[ 4] Later, they traveled through Southeast Asia and Central Europe , living for almost a year in Prague , the Czech Republic .[ 5] Wilson spent this time abroad pursuing her interest in writing.
Upon returning to the United States, Wilson and Neufeld moved to Chicago , where she worked for three years as a research editor at Playboy magazine[ 6] while continuing to hone her fiction writing.
Wilson was awarded a Wallace Stegner Fellowship in Creative Writing at Stanford University from 1997 to 1999,[ 7] where she studied with Tobias Wolff ,[ 8] Elizabeth Tallent , and Gilbert Sorrentino . Following that experience, Wilson was awarded a Fine Arts Work Center residency in Cape Cod , Massachusetts , from 1999 to 2000.[ 9] She was awarded a residency at Yaddo in 2011.[ 3]
Wilson's short stories have been published in AGNI ,[ 10] Third Coast , and Slice , among others, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize .[ 9] Her comics writing has been published in the Oxford American ,[ 8] Smith Magazine ,[ 11] and anthologized in The Big Feminist BUT [ 6] and the Trina Robbins project, From Girls to Grrrlz: A History of Women’s Comics from Teens to Zines .[ 12] Wilson was a co-writer of the motion comics elements of the American Broadcasting Company television program Earth 2100 .[ 13]
Wilson and Neufeld co-edited the comics and prose anthology Flashed: Sudden Stories in Comics and Prose , which features contributions from Junot Díaz , Lynda Barry , Sheila Heti , Gabrielle Bell , Kellie Wells , Nick Bertozzi , and many more authors.[ 14]
Wilson's debut novel Girl Through Glass was published by Harper in February 2016. Jean Lenihan of the Los Angeles Review of Books described Girl Through Glass :
In the end, the well-honed storyline . . . is not unlike a certain kind of stylized psychological ballet, á la Antony Tudor , with heightened characters dancing along dire boundaries. Powerfully stark, both pretty and not, the scene begins with a dissolving family, the father exiting right, the mother left, leaving room for a mysterious caped man to lure the remaining girl-child into an inhumanly fast pas de deux . Is this Lazarus or Lucifer ? A woman enters from upstage, dancing with strength and purpose, here, perhaps, to save the girl. But the man has a double, too."[ 15]
The book was included in BuzzFeed ’s Most Exciting Books of 2016 list,[ 16] The Millions Most Anticipated 2016 fiction list,[ 17] and was named The Rumpus Book Club's January book.[ 18] The book was featured on National Public Radio [ 19] and in The New York Times ,[ 20] was long-listed for The Center for Fiction 's First Fiction Prize,[ 21] was a The Millions best-seller,[ 22] and was an Amazon Book of the Month.[ 23]
Personal life
Wilson lives in Brooklyn with her husband, cartoonist Josh Neufeld , and their daughter.[ 9]
Awards, fellowships, and residencies
Bibliography
References
^ RHG. "Review: Girl Through Glass by Sari Wilson," Raven-Haired Girl (Feb. 2, 2016).
^ "Class Notes," Packer Magazine (Winter 2016), p. 47.
^ a b Davis, Rebecca. "A Childhood Love Letter to Ballet: Author Sari Wilson Visits Northshire," Saratoga Today (Feb. 18, 2016).
^ DZIEMIANOWICZ, JOE. "TURNING THE TABLES: Guys aren't the only ones on bended knees," New York Daily News (May 2001).
^ Salek, Rebecca. "Poisonous Bugs, Crazy Farmers and the True Meaning of Enlightenment: Josh Neufeld and Sari Wilson," Sequential Tart (Feb. 2005).
^ a b Sparacio, Andrea. "An Interview with Contributors of The Big Feminist BUT," Archived 2016-03-06 at the Wayback Machine Slice Magazine (September 30, 2013).
^ Spears, Brian. "THE RUMPUS BOOK CLUB CHAT WITH SARI WILSON," The Rumpus Book Club (February 17, 2016).
^ a b "Girl Through Glass (Wilson) - Author Bio," Lit Lovers . Accessed March 4, 2016.
^ a b c Giddings, Megan. “A Different Set of Muscles”: An Interview with Josh Neufeld and Sari Wilson," Smokelong Quarterly (Nov. 30, 2016).
^ Wilson, Sari. "The Sightseer," AGNI 60 (Oct. 2004).
^ Wilson, Sari (Aug 4, 2008). "The Beekeeper" . Smith Magazine: Next-Door Neighbor Project . Archived from the original on Aug 22, 2008. ; art by Josh Neufeld
^ Tom. "Behind the Scenes with Writer and Comics Educator Sari Wilson," Graphic Novel Reporter (Jan. 3, 2010).
^ Cowan, Adri. "Link Ink — Spider-Man Stained Glass, Giant Robot," Archived 2016-03-11 at the Wayback Machine Comics Alliance (June 2, 2009).
^ Karp, Jesse (Feb 15, 2016). "Review of Flashed " . Booklist . Archived from the original on Jul 16, 2019 – via JoshComix.com.
^ Lenihan, Jean. "The Woman Inside," Los Angeles Review of Books (MAY 12, 2016).
^ Lee, Jarry. "The 27 Most Exciting Books Coming In 2016," Buzzfeed (Jan. 19, 2016).
^ "Most Anticipated: The Great 2016 Book Preview," The Millions (Jan. 4, 2016).
^ "THE RUMPUS BOOK CLUB CHAT WITH SARI WILSON," The Rumpus Book Club (February 17, 2016).
^ NPR Staff "Passion And Obsession En Pointe In 'Girl Through Glass'," NPR Weekend Edition Sunday (January 24, 2016).
^ Smith, Namara. "THE SHORTLIST: First Novels," New York Times (March 4, 2016).
^ "Center for Fiction Announces First Novel Prize Longlist," Poets & Writers (July 13, 2016).
^ Moran, Nick. "The Millions Top Ten: June 2016," The Millions (July 8, 2016).
^ Girl Through Glass official page , HarperCollins website. Accessed July 16, 2019.
^ "Sari Wilson Residency," Bethany Arts Center. Retrieved Sept. 7, 2022.
^ "Sari Wilson," Ragdale website. Retrieved Sept. 7, 2022.
External links