Patrick Cottrell
Patrick Cottrell | |
---|---|
Born | Patty Yumi Cottrell 1981 (age 42–43) South Korea |
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | American |
Education | School of the Art Institute of Chicago (MFA) |
Genre | |
Notable works | Sorry to Disrupt the Peace |
Notable awards | Whiting Award |
Patrick Cottrell (born Patty Yumi Cottrell, 1981) is an American writer. He is the author of Sorry to Disrupt the Peace and the winner of a 2018 Whiting Award. He teaches at the University of Denver.[1]
Biography
[edit]Cottrell was born in South Korea in 1981 and was adopted, along with two biologically unrelated younger Korean boys, into a family from the Midwestern United States.[2] He was raised in Pittsburgh, Chicago, and Milwaukee.[3]
Cottrell started his first novel in his early thirties.[4] In 2012 he received his M.F.A. from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[5] After moving from New York to Los Angeles, he completed the novel in 2016.[6] The resulting book, a "stylized contemporary noir" titled Sorry to Disrupt the Peace, was published by McSweeney's in 2017.[7] Cottrell has called the book "an anti-memoir".[8] It tells the story of Helen, a woman adopted from Korea at a young age, who returns to her adoptive parents' home in Milwaukee after her adoptive brother's suicide.[9] Writing for The Rumpus, Liza St. James called the book "marvelously interior" and praised the writing as "discursive and associative and gripping all at once".[10] The Guardian called the book "electrifying in its freshness"[11] and the San Francisco Chronicle called it "a strange and lovely thing".[12] Sorry to Disrupt the Peace won a National Gold Medal from the Independent Publisher Book Awards for Best First Book in the Fiction category.[13] It also won Barnes & Noble’s 2017 Discover Award for Fiction.[14]
In 2018 Cottrell received the Whiting Award in fiction, which is given to promising writers in the early stages of their careers.[15][16] The selection committee said that his writing "opens up fresh lines of questioning in the old interrogations of identity".[3]
Cottrell came out as transgender in 2021.[17]
Recognition
[edit]- 2017: Barnes & Noble Discover Award[14]
- 2017: National Gold Medal from the Independent Publisher Book Awards for Best First Book – Fiction[13]
- 2018: Whiting Award[3]
Bibliography
[edit]- Cottrell, Patty Yumi (2017). Sorry to Disrupt the Peace. McSweeney's. ISBN 9781944211301.
References
[edit]- ^ "Patrick Cottrell | Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences". liberalarts.du.edu. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
- ^ Cottrell, Patty Yumi (May 18, 2017). "Patty Yumi Cottrell: 'I'm not trying to hide anything – the novel is not a memoir'". The Guardian (Interview). Interviewed by Richard Lea. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ a b c "Patty Yumi Cottrell". The Whiting Foundation. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Cottrell, Patty Yumi (May 18, 2017). "Patty Yumi Cottrell: Haunted and Obsessed". The Margins (Interview). Interviewed by Brandon Shimoda. Asian American Writers Workshop. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ "SAIC Writing Program Students and Alumni". School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Archived from the original on October 7, 2018. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Cottrell, Patty Yumi (November 17, 2017). "Drawing Close to the Void: Talking with Patty Yumi Cottrell". The Rumpus (Interview). Interviewed by Maria Anderson. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ McNamara, Nathan Scott (March 14, 2017). "The Waterfall Coping Strategy: Patty Yumi Cottrell's 'Sorry to Disrupt the Peace'". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Cottrell, Patty Yumi (March 21, 2017). "Patty Yumi Cottrell: Writing is not Therapeutic in Any Way". LitHub (Interview). Interviewed by Claire Luchette. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
- ^ "Sorry to Disrupt the Peace". Publishers Weekly. November 21, 2016. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ St. James, Liza (April 11, 2017). "The Myth of the Troubled Female in Sorry to Disrupt the Peace". The Rumpus. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Scholes, Lucy (May 7, 2017). "Sorry to Disrupt the Peace by Patty Yumi Cottrell review – an electifying existential detective hunt". The Guardian. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Masad, Ilana (April 27, 2017). "'Sorry to Disrupt the Peace,' by Patty Yumi Cottrell". SFGate. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ a b "2017 Independent Publisher Book Awards National Medalists: 21st Annual Awards". Independent Publisher. Retrieved October 6, 2017.
- ^ a b "2017 Discover Awards". Barnes & Noble. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Hertzel, Laurie (March 26, 2018). "Whiting Awards go to Weike Wang, Patty Yumi Cottrell, eight others". Star Tribune. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Vanderhoof, Erin (March 22, 2018). "The Crystal Ball of the Literature World Has Picked These 10 Writers to Watch This Year". Vanity Fair. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ Cottrell, Patrick [@pmcottrell] (January 8, 2021). "For those who don't know yet, I thought l'd put this out here: my new name is Patrick. I'm trans. My pronouns are he/they. Feeling grateful and calm" (Tweet). Retrieved August 20, 2021 – via Twitter.
- 1981 births
- Living people
- 21st-century American novelists
- School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni
- American writers of Korean descent
- South Korean emigrants to the United States
- South Korean adoptees
- People from Milwaukee
- American male novelists
- 21st-century male writers
- American transgender writers
- Transgender male writers
- American LGBTQ people of Asian descent
- 21st-century American male writers