David Leavitt

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(b. 1961)

1986The Lost Language of Cranes. Leavitt's novel concerns a father who has concealed his homosexuality for twenty-seven years, his uncomprehending wife, and their gay son. Leavitt's abiding theme is the repercussions of gay identity for family and society. His sensitive but also provocative handling of this theme has attracted considerable critical controversy and respect. The Pittsburgh-born writer's first book, Family Dancing (1984), treats various domestic conflicts.
1993While England Sleeps. Leavitt's historical novel is criticized for its unacknowledged use of English poet Stephen Spender's memoirs of the Spanish Civil War. The controversy brings Leavitt's book into the spotlight, however, as does his candid writing about homosexual love.
1997Arkansas: Three Novellas. Leavitt interweaves autobiographical elements and considerations of love and loss. In The Term Paper Artist, a writer named David Leavitt writes school papers in exchange for sexual favors; in Saturn Street, a gay man who delivers lunches to homebound AIDS victims falls in love with one of his clients; and in The Wooden Anniversary, Nathan and Celia, characters from Leavitt's previous story collections, reunite after a five-year separation.

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David Leavitt
Born June 23, 1961(1961-06-23)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation short story writer, novelist, essayist, professor
Nationality American
Literary movement Minimalism, Gay Literature
Notable work(s) Family Dancing, The Lost Language of Cranes, While England Sleeps
Notable award(s) finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award
1983


David Leavitt (born June 23, 1961) is an American novelist.

Contents

Biography

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Leavitt is a graduate of Yale University.[1] and a professor at the University of Florida. He has also taught at Princeton.

He is the author of Family Dancing, Equal Affections, The Page Turner, Martin Bauman, or A Sure Thing, The Lost Language of Cranes, While England Sleeps (for the publication of which he was sued by the poet Stephen Spender), The Body of Jonah Boyd, and numerous short stories. His most recent novel is The Indian Clerk. Leavitt, who is openly gay,[2] has frequently explored gay issues in his work.[1]

At the University of Florida, he is a member of the Creative Writing faculty and is also the editor of Subtropics magazine, the University of Florida's literary review. He divides his time between Florida and Tuscany, Italy. Many of his books have been translated into Italian and published there.

In 1994–95, Leavitt was sued by the English poet Stephen Spender, who claimed Leavitt had plagiarized his memoir in While England Sleeps.[3] Subsequently, Viking Press, Leavitt's publishers, agreed to delete a passage that closely paralleled Spender's. The publishers also agreed never to publish the manuscript that had become the subject of the charge of plagiarism. In addition, Spender claimed that Leavitt had fictionalized his life, especially by adding graphic fantasies attributed to the character modeled after Spender (in particular, "allegedly using his relationship with 'Jimmy Younger'"). "If he wants to write about sexual fantasies, he should write about his own," the poet said.[4]

Bibliography

Novels

Collections

  • Family Dancing (1984)
  • A Place I've Never Been (1990)
  • Arkansas (1997)
  • The Marble Quilt (2001)

Nonfiction

  • Italian Pleasures (1996) (with Mark Mitchell)
  • Pages Passed from Hand to Hand: The Hidden Tradition of Homosexual Literature in English from 1748 to 1914 (1997) (editor, with Mark Mitchell)
  • In Maremma: Life and a House in Southern Tuscany (2001) (with Mark Mitchell)
  • Florence, A Delicate Case (2003)
  • The Man Who Knew Too Much: Alan Turing and the Invention of the Computer (2005)

References

  1. ^ a b Lawson, Don S. (2007-10-11). "Leavitt, David". glbtq.com. http://www.glbtq.com/literature/leavitt_d.html. Retrieved 2008-01-08. 
  2. ^ Pela, Robert L. (1997-04-01). "Uncensorable Leavitt - gay author David Leavitt - Interview" (– Scholar search). The Advocate. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1589/is_n730/ai_20139159. Retrieved 2008-01-08 [dead link][dead link]
  3. ^ Stephen Spender's entry in the Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. ^ Stephen Spender: "My Life Is Mine: It Is Not David Leavitt's", The New York Times, 4 Sep 1994

External links


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