American dramatist
Saïd Sayrafiezadeh (Persian : سعید صیرفیزاده ; ; born 1968)[ 1] is an American memoirist, playwright and fiction writer living in New York City. He won a 2010 Whiting Award for his memoir, When Skateboards Will Be Free . He is the author of two story collections, American Estrangement (2021) and Brief Encounters With the Enemy, which was short-listed for the 2014 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for debut fiction . He serves on the board of directors for the New York Foundation for the Arts .
Early life and education
Sayrafiezadeh was born in Brooklyn , New York, to an Iranian father, Mahmoud Sayrafiezadeh,[ 2] and an American Jewish mother, Martha Harris, both of whom were members of the Socialist Workers Party . He was raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . His maternal uncle was the novelist Mark Harris .[ 3] He lives in New York City .
He attended the University of Pittsburgh , but dropped out his senior year.[ 4]
Work
Sayrafiezadeh has published essays and short stories in a number of outlets, including The New Yorker , The Paris Review , The New York Times , Granta , and McSweeney's .
His plays include New York is Bleeding, Autobiography of a Terrorist, All Fall Away, and Long Dream in Summer . They have been produced or read at South Coast Repertory , New York Theatre Workshop , The Humana Festival of New American Plays , and at The Sundance Theatre Lab .
Sayrafiezadeh has also published a memoir about his childhood in the Socialist Workers Party.
He has published two short story collections, Brief Encounters with the Enemy in 2013[ 5] and American Estrangement in 2021. The latter includes "Audition", a story based on his experiences with drug addiction and as an aspiring actor.[ 6]
Bibliography
Short fiction
Collections
Sayrafiezadeh, Saïd (2013). Brief encounters with the enemy .
— (2021). American estrangement .
Stories
Title
Year
First published
Reprinted/collected
Notes
A, S, D, F
2021
Sayrafiezadeh, Saïd (May 31, 2021). "A, S, D, F" . The New Yorker . 97 (14): 50– 56.
Sayrafiezadeh, Saïd (Spring 2006). "Most Livable City" . The Paris Review . 176 . Retrieved August 27, 2015 .
— (Winter 2014). "Metaphor of the Falling Cat" . The Paris Review . 211 . Retrieved September 30, 2014 .
— (March 1, 2010). "Appetite" . The New Yorker . 87 (44): 58– 63. Retrieved July 2, 2017 .
— (February 28, 2011). "Paranoia" . The New Yorker . 87 (44): 58– 63. Retrieved July 3, 2017 .
— (January 16, 2012). "A Brief Encounter with the Enemy" . The New Yorker . 87 (44): 58– 63. Retrieved November 11, 2014 .
— (July 28, 2014). "Last Meal at Whole Foods" . The New Yorker . 90 (21): 64– 69. Retrieved September 30, 2014 .
— (September 10, 2018). "Audition" . The New Yorker . 90 (21): 64– 69. Retrieved September 30, 2014 .
Essays and reporting
Memoirs
Sayrafiezadeh, Saïd (2009). When skateboards will be free: a memoir of a political childhood .
References
^ Sayrafiezadeh, Saïd. "My Mother and the Stranger" . Open City. Retrieved June 13, 2010 .
^ Nayeri, Kamran. "Mahmoud Sayrafizadeh the Father of Iranian Trotskyism" . Our Place in the World: A Journal of Ecosocialism .
^ Garner, Dwight (March 31, 2009). " 'Das Kapital' as a Boy's Bedtime Story" . The New York Times .
^ "The name game: Playwright mines identity issues in comic 'Terrorist' " . April 6, 2017.
^ Sayrafiezadeh, Saïd (August 16, 2013). "Service Jobs" . The New York Times . Retrieved July 11, 2023 .
^ "Stories That Render America Just Strange Enough to Recognize" . The New York Times . August 10, 2021. Retrieved July 11, 2023 .
External links
International National People Other