John Rolfe Gardiner (born 1936) is an American author of several novels and short stories.
Life and career
He is best known for his novel Somewhere in France (1999), aside from which he has written four other novels and two short-story collections. Sixteen of his stories were published in The New Yorker; others were published in The American Scholar and in other publications. His short story "The Voyage Out" was anthologized in The Best American Short Stories. His work was awarded the Lila Wallace Reader's Digest Writers Award and the O. Henry Award.
Gardiner's stories often take place in his native Virginia, but also in various places in Europe, most prominently in France.[1] His work has received vast critical acclaim:
Elegantly written, this funny, poignant gem of a book..
There is something tantalizingly sinister about Gardiner's short stories: a hint of intrigue and a soupcon of the illicit connect them all... Haunting fare from a master storyteller, richly evocative and thought provoking
— Carol Haggas, on The Magellan House
Gardiner is a wonderfully distinctive writer whose often funny stories are animated by a healing, intelligent compassion for characters groping for redemption in a heartless world