Samantha Hunt
American novelist (born 1971)
Samantha Hunt (born May 15, 1971) is an American novelist, essayist and short-story writer.
She is the author of The Dark Dark and The Unwritten Book , published by Farrar, Straus, Giroux; The Seas , published by MacAdam/Cage and Tin House ;[ 1] and the novels Mr. Splitfoot and The Invention of Everything Else ,[ 2] published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt .
Early life
Hunt was born the youngest of six children[ 3] in 1971. Her father was an editor, her mother is a painter.[ 4] She moved in 1989 to attend the University of Vermont ,[ 5] where she studied literature, printmaking and geology. She received her MFA from Warren Wilson College , before moving to New York City in 1999.[ 4]
Career
Books
Hunt's debut novel, The Seas , first published in 2004, is a magical-realist novel about a young girl in a Northern town who believes herself to be a mermaid.[ 6] The book was voted one of the Village Voice Literary Supplement 's Favorite Books of 2004,[ 7] and won the National Book Foundation award for "5 under 35" in 2006.[ 8] In 2018, The Seas was republished by Tin House Books in 2018 with a foreword by Maggie Nelson .[ 7]
In 2008, she published her second novel, The Invention of Everything Else through Houghton Mifflin Harcourt . The novel provides a fictionalized account of the final days of inventor Nikola Tesla . It won both the Bard Fiction Prize in 2010, and was shortlisted for the Orange Prize .[ 9]
Her other novels include Mr. Splitfoot (2016) , a ghost story,[ 10] and The Dark Dark: Stories (2017), a collection of short stories.
Hunt's short stories and essays have appeared in The New Yorker , New York Times Magazine , McSweeney's , The Atlantic , A Public Space , Cabinet , Esquire , The Believer , Blind Spot , Harper’s Bazaar , The Village Voice , Seed Magazine , Tin House , New York Magazine , on the radio program This American Life and in a number of anthologies including Trampoline edited by Kelly Link . Hunt's play, The Difference Engine , a story about the life of Charles Babbage , was produced by the Theater of a Two-Headed Calf.
Awards
Hunt won the Bard Fiction Prize,[ 11] the National Book Foundation's 5 Under 35 award,[ 12] the St. Francis College Literary Prize [ 13] and was a finalist for the Orange Prize .[ 14] In 2017, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship for fiction.[ 15]
Literary influences
Hunt's credits her experiences growing up one of six children for her interest in literature,[ 16] her dialogue,[ 17] and her fictional portrayals of motherhood.[ 3]
Profession
Hunt is a professor of writing at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY .[ 10]
Bibliography
Books
Online texts
Short stories
"A Love Story", The New Yorker , 22 May 2017[ 18]
"The Yellow", The New Yorker , 21 November 2010[ 19]
"Three Days", The New Yorker , 8 January 2016[ 20]
"Go Team", The Atlantic , March 2020[ 21]
Essays
"There Is Only One Direction", New York Magazine , 12 May 2015[ 22]
"Queer Theorem", Lapham's Quarterly , Vol. 10, No. 2, Spring 2017[ 23]
"Terrible Twins", The New York Times Magazine , 1 April 2011[ 24]
"Swiss Near-Miss", This American Life , 11 June 2014[ 25]
"A Brief History of Books That Do Not Exist", Lithub , 4 January 2016[ 26]
References
^ Lyons, Stephen (December 19, 2004). "A 'mermaid holds the key to a beloved sailors fate" . San Francisco Chronicle.
^ Thomas, Louisa (March 23, 2008). "At The Hotel New Yorker" . New York Times .
^ a b Leyshon, Cressida (May 23, 2017). "This Week in Fiction: Samantha Hunt on the Unspoken Terrors of Being a New Mother" . The New Yorker . Retrieved March 9, 2020 .
^ a b "Samantha Hunt" . www.goodreads.com . Retrieved March 9, 2020 .
^ "Q&A with author Samantha Hunt" . Financial Times . February 19, 2016. Retrieved June 19, 2022 .(subscription required)
^ "The Seas" . www.goodreads.com . Retrieved March 9, 2020 .
^ a b "Samantha Hunt : : The Seas" . samanthahunt.net . Retrieved March 9, 2020 .
^ "The Seas" . National Book Foundation . Retrieved March 9, 2020 .
^ "Samantha Hunt" . www.samanthahunt.net . Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
^ a b "Pratt Institute" . www.pratt.edu . Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
^ "Samantha Hunt, 2010 Recipient"
Bard Fiction Prize.
^ "KQED, Public Media for Northern California" . www.kqed.org .
^ "Samantha Hunt Wins 2019 SFC Literary Prize for The Dark Dark" . St. Francis College. September 21, 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2023 .
^ Itzkoff, David (April 21, 2009). "Orange Prize Finalists Announced" . New York Times .
^ "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Samantha Hunt" . Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
^ "Samantha Hunt: By the Book" . The New York Times . June 21, 2018. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
^ Gebremedhin, Thomas (February 11, 2020). "Samantha Hunt on the Unbearable Flatness of Being" . The Atlantic . Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (May 15, 2017). " "A Love Story" " . The New Yorker . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (November 22, 2010). "The Yellow" . The New Yorker . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (January 9, 2006). "Three Days" . The New Yorker . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (February 11, 2020). "Go, Team" . The Atlantic . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (May 12, 2015). "There Is Only One Direction" . The Cut . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ "Queer Theorem | Samantha Hunt" . Lapham’s Quarterly . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (April 1, 2011). "Terrible Twins" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Beckmann, Claire; Samantha Hunt (December 12, 2017). "Swiss Near-miss" . This American Life . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
^ Hunt, Samantha (January 4, 2016). "A Brief History of Books That Do Not Exist" . Literary Hub . Retrieved February 24, 2022 .
External links
International National Other