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Annie Proulx

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Annie Proulx
Annie Proulx
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  • Born: 22 August 1935
  • Birthplace: Norwich, Connecticut
  • Best Known As: The author of The Shipping News

Although she didn't start her career as a writer until she was in her 50s, in 1993 E. Annie Proulx became the first woman to win the prestigious PEN/Faulkner book award, for her debut novel Postcards. The following year she won a Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for her novel The Shipping News. She is also the author of Accordion Crimes (1996) and several short stories.

Proulx's name is pronounced proo... Her 1997 short story "Brokeback Mountain" was made into a 2005 film starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal.

 
 
Biography: E. Annie Proulx

E. Annie Proulx (born 1935) won the 1993 PEN/ Faulkner Award for her novel "Postcards" and a Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for her next novel, "The Shipping News".

While she was certainly not an overnight sensation, having written stories from the age of ten and published short fiction since her early 20s, E. Annie Proulx did present her own remarkable success story, one characterized by hard work and a fierce independence. The measure of her success was impressive; with her first attempt at long-form fiction, Proulx won the respected PEN/Faulkner Award and the accolades of critics and fellow authors. David Bradley, writing for the New York Times, dubbed Postcards an example of "The Great American Novel." This acclaim snowballed with the publication of The Shipping News, which garnered three major prizes for Proulx and brought comparisons to legendary authors William Faulkner, Theodore Dreiser, and Herman Melville. There was an overwhelmingly positive response to what Sara Rimer, writing for the New York Times, characterized as Proulx's "offbeat, darkly comic voice and vivid sense of place."

From Free-lance Journalist to Novelist

Proulx was transformed into a novelist after 19 years of work as a free-lance journalist. She wrote articles for magazines on a myriad of topics, of which she offered these examples to Contemporary Authors: "weather, apples, canoeing, mountain lions, mice, cuisine, libraries, African beadwork, cider and lettuces." Her work appeared in publications such as Country Journal, Organic Gardening, and Yankee. In the early 1980s Proulx produced a shelf full of on-assignment "how-to" books on food, gardening, and carpentering, including Sweet & Hard Cider: Making It, Using It, and Enjoying It, The Fine Art of Salad Gardening, and Plan and Make Your Own Fences and Gates, Walkways, Walls and Drives. Another journalistic venture cast Proulx as the founder and editor of a rural newspaper, the Vershire Behind the Times, from 1984 to 1986. The financial rewards for such work were meager; devoting time to writing short stories was a luxury - Proulx averaged two a year, nearly all of which were published.

In tiny backwoods towns in Vermont, Proulx indulged her passion for fishing, hunting, and canoeing and lived the self-made, from-scratch lifestyle suggested by her free-lance assignments. She told Washington Post writer David Streitfeld of her love for places "where things are still done with a sort of awkward and almost tiresome physical input that's always so very satisfying. I can do these little chores - getting in my wood or planting in the garden - and feel quite enriched." Proulx also relishes the smallest details in her environment; she told Time's John Skow of her interest in "everything … from tree branches and wild mushrooms to animal tracks.… It's excellent training for the eye. Most of us stagger around deaf and blind." This focus is something instilled in Proulx by her mother, a painter and amateur naturalist. As a child she was taught to observe the activities of ants, whom her mother would give voices, and to notice every particular, the texture of fabrics and the distinctive characteristics in a face.

An early chapter in Proulx's life could have led to a very different existence for the author. After receiving her B.A. and M.A. in history, Proulx completed doctoral orals in Renaissance economic history, the Canadian North, and China; but in 1975 she abandoned academia for fear of not finding a teaching job. As she told Contemporary Authors, this was jumping "from the frying pan into the fire, " and left her in "brutally poor circumstances. Compensations were silence and decent fishing, both vanished now." Generally reticent about her private life, Proulx admits that she was, well, "wild" during those years. She told David Streitfeld, "I liked the rough side of things, always." The end of her academic career coincided with the end of her third marriage; as a result, Proulx raised her three sons as a single parent.

Publishes First Book

In 1983 Proulx's career as a fiction writer was boosted by a notice in Best American Short Stories, an honor that was repeated in 1987. Proulx published her first book, Heart Songs and Other Stories, in 1988. This collection introduced the reading public to Annie Proulx's gritty themes and deft, if unconventional, use of language. Against the starkly beautiful backdrop of the New England countryside and in the guise of hunting and fishing stories, Proulx depicts the struggles of men trying to cope with their emotionally and morally tangled lives. Proulx illustrates the stories with vivid verbal pictures, such as a man who eats a fish "as he would a slice of watermelon" or a woman who is as "thin as a folded dollar bill, her hand as narrow and cold as a trout."

With the addition of two new stories, a 1995 edition of Heart Songs was released under the same title. Kimberly G. Allen, writing for the Library Journal, suggested that perhaps the subject matter would not interest every reader, but concluded that "the stories flow effortlessly and the prose is elegant." In the New York Times, Kenneth Rosen noted that the stories are "most compelling when they're rooted in a coarse rural sexuality. At these times, their sometimes enigmatic, often lyrical images seem to complement New England's lavish but barren beauty."

When Scribner's editor Tom Jenks drew up Proulx's contract for Heart Songs he suggested that they include a novel in the agreement. Positive critical response to the short stories prompted her next editor, John Glusman, to reiterate the idea that she should try her hand at a novel. The resulting work, Postcards, proved to be a liberating experience for Proulx, who had never before considered undertaking such a task. With characteristic fervor she plunged into the assignment; it took her half an hour to form the plan for her first novel. She told the New York Times, "It was astonishing how easy writing a novel was compared to writing a short story. … I had room to expand. It was like getting into a warm bathtub. I haven't been able to write a short story since."

In many ways, Postcards resembles the stories found in Heart Songs given a larger scope. The main character is again an emotionally tortured man from New England, but Loyal Blood is cast out into a new world when he flees the family farm after accidentally killing his fiancee. Proulx plotted Blood's cross-country wanderings with her own trip across America doing research. David Bradley of the New York Times described the resulting book as "episodic and picaresque, a 'Huckleberry Finn' without the laughter, 'The Grapes of Wrath, ' without the hope." Postcards Postcards is as much a novel about the land, however, as it is about a man. From a description of the Vermont farm, likening it to the opened pages of a Bible, to a Florida sky marked by "a fan of clouds like crimson knife blades, " Proulx luxuriates in her freedom to sharply define the various settings in the sweeping tale.

"It was astonishing how easy writing a novel was compared to writing a short story.… It was like getting into a warm bathtub. I haven't been able to write a short story since."

Won Several Awards for Fiction

Postcards was undoubtedly a professional and personal success; it proved Proulx's skill and comfort working in the new form. The most tangible evidence of her achievement was receiving the 1993 PEN/Faulkner Award for fiction and its $15, 000 bonus. Proulx also enjoyed the distinction of being the first woman to be so honored; the resulting New York Times headline read: "Shutout Ends: It's Men 12, Women 1." The accompanying article noted: "Ms. Proulx's novel was widely praised by critics for the vastness of its physical landscape and the intimacy of its language."

The very next year, Proulx capped this success by writing The Shipping News. This novel is a dark but comic tale set in Newfoundland, the story of a luckless newspaper reporter named Quoyle. It is packed with details of the island's landscape, weather, food, and language, all drawn in a choppy yet vibrant style. An oft-quoted passage describing the protagonist illustrates this method: "A great damp loaf of a body. At six he weighed eighty pounds. At sixteen he was buried under a casement of flesh. Head shaped like a crenshaw, no neck, reddish hair ruched back. Features as bunched as kissed fingertips." The book resulted in a steady stream of awards: first, the Heartland Prize from the Chicago Tribune, followed by the Irish Times International Award and the National Book Award. These honors were all topped by the 1994 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

In the media, the response was almost unanimously positive, even doting. An exception was a review by Verlyn Klinkenborg. Writing for the New Republic, she viewed these awards with a cynical eye: "The Shipping News is an out-and-out crowd-pleaser, a book that will certainly not diminish the commercial value of the National Book Award even as that award (and the Pulitzer Prize) increases this book's sales." Klinkenborg suspected that under the "powerfully descriptive" writing there was a dramatic and emotional vacuum. More often, however, the novel was heaped with praise; in the Yale Review, Walter Kendrick remarked, "The Shipping News reverberates with voices, each possessing a distinctive twang that Proulx exuberantly sings along with. … She loves dense, chewy presumably local words: stribbled, streeling, skreel, marl, scrawn, thunge, drenty, glutch. … People, landscape, and language fit together like rocks in an unhewn wall, forming a marvelous composite portrait of North America's last margin." In New Statesman & Society Roz Kaveney noted how, with the book's improbable twists of plot, "Proulx's triumph is that she makes us swallow all of this. Her work not only describes, but is imbued with, a chancy decency that looks us forthright in the eye and challenges disbelief. This is an artful novel."

The Shipping News was the result of a canoeing trip to Newfoundland, followed by careful research. After falling in love with the place, the author took at least seven trips to the island, talking to residents and absorbing the atmosphere. She pulled her characters' names from telephone directories and words from the Dictionary of Newfoundland English. Here the journalist and historian in Proulx surfaced, both in her interest in seemingly arcane details, and in her passion for "getting it right." She told Time's John Skow, "I believe if you get the landscape right…the characters will step out of it, and they'll be in the right place. The story will come from the landscape."

Write about What You Don't Know

With this approach to writing fiction, Proulx breaks with the standard advice to "write what you know." Skow explained, "She says that the autobiographical content of her fiction is 'zero' and urges young novelists to ignore the customary preachment, " and instead, "she says 'Write about what you'd like to know."' In an interview for the Rhode Islander Magazine, Proulx elaborated, "I don't much like the kind of book that is nothing but interior self-examination. I think part of the fault lies with the bad advice writers have been getting for years.… Sometimes what you know is pretty boring."

In researching her next novel, Proulx became an expert on accordion music. She studied not how to play the instrument, but how to take one apart and then reconstruct it. Various magazine articles reveal that Accordion Crimes is about the music of immigrants and specifically about different kinds of accordion music. The author described the work in the Rhode Islander as "stories of immigrant lives and music on both borders - la frontera and la frontière." In this there is a hint of autobiographical interest: Proulx's father's family came to the United States from Quebec.

Reluctant Celebrity

In the wake of her fame, Proulx was hard-pressed to find the time she needed to research and write. In 1994 she managed to publish short stories in Atlantic Monthly and Esquire. On top of her schedule of book signings and readings, she was inundated with requests for interviews, many of which took place in her remote Vermont home. The resulting articles are sprinkled with her comment that the house is for sale. Proulx soon bought a second place in Newfoundland, and by the spring of 1995 had moved to Wyoming. After a visit to Arizona State University that April, the Arizona Republic sported the headline: "Pulitzer-winning author shuns spotlight to write" and found Proulx "prickly and bored, a master of the withering look and stony reply." The Phoenix Gazette offered: "Proulx … is not a people person. A reluctant celebrity after the publication of her second novel, she has developed a heat shield against the scorching intrusions into her private life that come with fame."

The media also revealed that Hollywood has been courting Proulx with offers to turn The Shipping News into a movie. The author dismissed this topic, as she has the filmmakers' offers; what interested her most was completing Accordion Crimes, which was released in 1996, and pressing on with other writing projects. Almost a year earlier, Proulx had told Sara Rimer of the New York Times, "I have at the moment three novels sitting in my head, waiting to get on paper, and I know exactly how each one is going to go." She was faced with the "Catch-22" of her celebrity status: having the financial security to become a full-time fiction writer, and yet being overwhelmed by the so-called duties of celebrity. If the past is any indication, however, the author's demand for privacy and independence will prevail and the reading public can look forward to many more novels from E. Annie Proulx.

Further Reading

Contemporary Authors, Volume 145, Gale, 1995.

Contemporary Literary Criticism, Volume 81: Yearbook 1993, Gale, 1994.

New York Times, April 21, 1993; June 23, 1994.

 

(born Aug. 22, 1935, Norwich, Conn., U.S.) U.S. writer. She studied at the University of Vermont. She began professional writing with commissioned nonfiction books on cooking, gardening, and country living. She founded and edited (1984 – 86) Behind the Times, a rural Vermont newspaper, and published stories in men's outdoor magazines. Her first novel, Postcards (1992), depicting the decline of the small farm, received the PEN/Faulkner Award. Subsequent novels include The Shipping News (1993, Pulitzer Prize, National Book Award), Accordion Crimes (1996), and That Old Ace in the Hole (2002). Her short story "Brokeback Mountain" appeared in the collection Close Range (1999) and was adapted as a movie (2005). Her other story collections include Heart Songs (1988) and Bad Dirt (2004).

For more information on Edna Annie Proulx, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Proulx, E. Annie
(Edna Annie Proulx) (prū), 1935–, American writer, b. Norwich, Conn., grad. Univ. of Vermont (B.A., 1969), Sir George Williams (now Concordia) Univ., Montreal (M.A., 1973). She was a journalist, wrote nonfiction articles for numerous publications, and was the author of several “how-to” books before beginning to write fiction in her 50s. Her stories and novels often feature barren landscapes, tough idiosyncratic characters, and a frequently bleak humor. Her first two volumes of fiction, Heart Songs and Other Stories (1988) and the novel Postcards (1992), won considerable critical praise. The Shipping News (1993), a novel that exhibits a superb sense of place and character, won the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award. It is set mainly in a desolate seaside community in Newfoundland and tells of a widowed father's attempt to create a home. After the novel Accordion Crimes (1996), Proulx, who moved to Wyoming in 1995, turned to the American West with Close Range (1999), powerful stories observing the hardscrabble lives of Wyoming natives with shrewdness, wry humor, and spare yet finely wrought prose, and the novel That Old Ace in the Hole (2002), set in the Southwest.
 
Works: Works by E. Annie Proulx
(b. 1935)

1988Heart Songs and Other Stories. Proulx's first book, a collection of stories dealing with backwoods communities in northern New England, receives little attention until reissued in 1994, when it would gain widespread critical acclaim for its power and stylistic mastery. Of French-Canadian descent, Proulx was born in Connecticut and did doctoral work in history at Concordia University in Montreal.
1992Postcards. Proulx's first novel depicting the decline of a Vermont family wins the PEN/Faulkner Award. It is praised by fellow novelist Frederick Busch for "its furious action, its searing contemplations, its language born of fury... and the author's powerful sense of the gothic soul of New England."
1993The Shipping News. Proulx's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, about a down-on-his-luck newspaperman who travels with his young daughters to his ancestral home in Newfoundland, is praised for its humor, eccentricity, and careful observation of the telling detail. Before writing it, Proulx had made several trips to the Newfoundland coast--a far-flung place she knew nothing of--simply to soak up the atmosphere.
1996Accordion Crimes. In a series of vignettes, Proulx's narrative follows a green, handmade accordion from its beginning in 1890 Sicily through a succession of owners of various ethnic backgrounds, to document the American immigrant experience. It wins the Dos Passos Prize for literature.
1999Close Range: Wyoming Stories. This collection depicts an extraordinary range of characters--a young Brahma bull rider, a gay rodeo rider, and a variety of cowpunchers, ranchers, and cattle dealers. Proulx describes Wyoming and its history in lyrical but sometimes gruesome terms. Critics admire her precise, seemingly effortless prose and her accurate ear for regional dialects. This collection includes "Brokeback Mountain," winner of an O. Henry Award.

 
Wikipedia: E. Annie Proulx
Edna Annie Proulx
Born: August 22 1935 (1935--) (age 72)
Norwich, Connecticut
Occupation: Novelist

Edna Annie Proulx (pronounced /pru:/) (born August 22, 1935) is an American journalist and author. Her second novel, The Shipping News (1993), won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for fiction in 1994. Her short story "Brokeback Mountain" was adapted as an Academy Award, BAFTA and Golden Globe Award-winning major motion picture released in 2005. Brokeback Mountain received massive critical acclaim and went on to be nominated for a leading eight Academy Awards, winning three of them. (However, the movie did not win Best Picture, a situation with which Proulx made public her disappointment.[1]) She won the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for her first novel, Postcards. She has written most of her stories and books simply as Annie Proulx, but has also used the names E. Annie Proulx and E.A. Proulx.

Personal life and writing

Annie Proulx was born in Norwich, Connecticut to parents of French-Canadian ancestry. She graduated from Deering High School in Portland, Maine, then attended Colby College "for a short period in the 1950s." She later returned to school, studying at the University of Vermont from 1966 to 1969, and graduated cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa with a Bachelor of Arts in History in 1969. She got her Master of Arts from Sir George Williams University (now Concordia University) in Montreal, Quebec in 1973 and pursued, but did not complete, her Ph.D. Starting as a journalist, her first published work of fiction is thought to be "The Customs Lounge", a science fiction story published in the September 1963 issue of If, under the byline "E.A. Proulx".[2] She subsequently published stories in Gray's Sporting Journal in the late 1970s, eventually publishing her first collection in 1988 and her first novel in 1992. Subsequently, she has been awarded NEA (in 1992) and Guggenheim (in 1993) fellowships.

A few years after receiving much attention for The Shipping News, she had the following comment on her celebrity status: "It's not good for one's view of human nature, that's for sure. You begin to see, when invitations are coming from festivals and colleges to come read (for an hour for a hefty sum of money), that the institutions are head-hunting for trophy writers. Most don't particularly care about your writing or what you're trying to say. You're there as a human object, one that has won a prize. It gives you a very odd, meat-rack kind of sensation."[3]

In 1997, Proulx was awarded the Dos Passos Prize. Proulx has twice won the O. Henry Prize for the year's best short story. In 1998, she won for "Brokeback Mountain," which had appeared in The New Yorker on October 13, 1997. Proulx won again the following year for "The Mud Below," which appeared in The New Yorker June 22 and 29, 1999. Both appear in her 1999 collection of short stories, Close Range: Wyoming Stories. The lead story in this collection, entitled "The Half-Skinned Steer," was selected by author Garrison Keillor for inclusion in The Best American Short Stories 1998, (Proulx herself edited the 1997 edition of this series) and later by novelist John Updike for inclusion in The Best American Short Stories of the Century (1999). In 2001 Proulx was one of the writers criticized by Brian Reynolds Myers in his polemical work A Reader's Manifesto.[4][5]

Proulx lived for more than thirty years in Vermont, has married and divorced three times, and has three sons and a daughter (named Jon, Gillis, Morgan, and Sylvia). In 1994, she moved to Wyoming, where she currently resides, spending part of the year in Newfoundland.

Criticism of Academy Awards

After the film adaptation of Brokeback Mountain lost the best picture Oscar to Crash at the 2006 Academy Awards, Proulx published a screed in the British newspaper The Guardian in which she lambasted the awards show. Among other complaints, Proulx pondered whether Philip Seymour Hoffman's portrayal of writer Truman Capote, though "brilliant," was in fact little more than "mimicry." She wrote that the Academy members were a "dim LA crowd" and exhibited "insufferable self-importance" when they did not select the film based on her short story as Best Picture. Proulx also referred to Crash as "Trash" and likened the evening to "a small-town talent-show night." She suggested that the awards attempted to be safely "controversial," but were by implication homophobic for not honoring Brokeback Mountain, which had won most major awards (including the Golden Globe for best drama) in the lead-up to the Oscars. She also suggested that Scientology influenced the decision.

Twice in her piece, Proulx referred to the Academy voters and show audience as "heffalumps," an insult that left some readers puzzled. Because the elephant is the mascot of the Republican Party, she may have been suggesting that Academy voters evinced right-wing bias when deciding which motion picture should win Best Picture. Given that Oscar host Jon Stewart joked that one could not see so many glittering stars in one place without making a donation to the Democratic Party, that presumably would come as a surprise to the Academy and its membership. More likely, she was drawing a social/cultural parallel between the Academy and the slow, reticent and cowardly creature from A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh stories.

She also called the performance of the Oscar-winning song "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp" a "violent" and "atrocious act."

Bibliography

Awards

Literary Awards and Prize Collections:

  • 2002 — Best Foreign Language Novels of 2002 / Best American Novel Award, Chinese Publishing Association and Peoples' Literature Publishing House (That Old Ace in the Hole)
  • 2000 — WILLA Literary Award, Women Writing the West
  • 2000 — Borders Original Voices Award in Fiction (Close Range, Wyoming Stories)
  • 2000 — "People in Hell Just Want a Drink of Water," Best American Short Stories 2000
  • 2000 — English-Speaking Union’s Ambassador Book Award (Close Range, Wyoming Stories)
  • 2000 — The New Yorker Book Award Best Fiction 1999 (Close Range, Wyoming Stories)
  • 1999 — "Half-Skinned Steer" inc. Best American Short Stories of the Century, ed. J. Updike
  • 1999 — "The Bunchgrass Edge of the World," The Best American Short Stories 1999
  • 1999 — "The Mud Below," O. Henry Awards Prize Stories 1999
  • 1998 — "Half-Skinned Steer" inc. Best American Short Stories 1998
  • 1993 — Irish Times International Fiction Prize (The Shipping News)
  • 1993 — Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize for Fiction (The Shipping News)

Film adaptations

References

External links


 
 

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "E. Annie Proulx" Read more

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