Judith Grossman: Difference between revisions

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*{{cite journal|url=http://www.pshares.org/issues/article.cfm?prmArticleID=2649|title=A Wave of the Hand|author=Judith Grossman|work=Ploughshares|date= Fall 1989|issue=#49|volume=15/2&3|isbn=0933277911|format=}} {{dead link|date=May 2010}}
*{{cite journal|url=http://www.pshares.org/issues/article.cfm?prmArticleID=2649|title=A Wave of the Hand|author=Judith Grossman|work=Ploughshares|date= Fall 1989|issue=#49|volume=15/2&3|isbn=0933277911|format=}} {{dead link|date=May 2010}}
*{{cite journal|url=http://www.pshares.org/issues/article.cfm?prmArticleID=4662|title=How Aliens Think|author=Judith Grossman|work=Ploughshares|date= Spring 1999|issue=#78|volume=25/1 |isbn=0933277253|format=}} {{dead link|date=May 2010}}
*{{cite journal|url=http://www.pshares.org/issues/article.cfm?prmArticleID=4662|title=How Aliens Think|author=Judith Grossman|work=Ploughshares|date= Spring 1999|issue=#78|volume=25/1 |isbn=0933277253|format=}} {{dead link|date=May 2010}}

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==Reviews==
==Reviews==

Revision as of 18:50, 2 September 2011

Judith Grossman is an American writer. She earned a scholarship to Oxford, from which she received a First Class degree in English in 1958. She received a PH.D. from Brandeis University, in 1968.[1] She taught at Bennington College.[2] She also taught in the Creative Writing MFA programs at U. C. Irvine (1992–95) and the University of Iowa (1997). She was chairman of the liberal arts division at Mount Ida College in Newton, Mass.[3]

She is married to the poet Allen Grossman, and has children Lev Grossman, Austin Grossman, and Bathsheba Grossman.

Works

  • Judith Grossman (1988). Her Own Terms. Soho Press Inc. ISBN 978-1569472897. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |unused_data= ignored (help)
  • Judith Grossman (August 20, 1999). How Aliens Think: Stories. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801861710.

Poetry

Criticism

Ploughshares[dead link]

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Reviews

Publisher's Weekly (October 1999):

Though she sometimes errs on the side of glib irony and her more formally ambitious stories may read like academic in-jokes, in the best and most straightforward of these 12 short narratives Grossman (Her Own Terms) achieves a polished balance of deadpan wit and understated emotional intensity. In precise, economical prose, Grossman depicts a generation of transatlantic drifters - mostly academics and writers who fled their modest post-war English subdivisions for the U.S. as soon as they came of age in the early '60s.

Fred Leebron, Ploughshares:

Grossman appears, from the evidence of this collection, to be both a writer who can write any kind of story and a thinker who can infuse any situation with intelligence and a compelling blend of distance and compassion.[4]

References

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