Sergio De La Pava
Sergio de la Pava | |
---|---|
Born | 1970 or 1971 (age 53–54) New Jersey |
Occupation | Writer, lawyer |
Nationality | American |
Website | |
sergiodelapava |
Sergio de la Pava (born 1970/71) is an American novelist and lawyer. He is best known for his novel A Naked Singularity.
Biography
Sergio de la Pava was born and raised in New Jersey, to parents who immigrated from Colombia. He attended Brooklyn Law School, where he met his wife. They live in New Jersey with their two children.[1]
He works as a public defender in Manhattan,[2] where he handles 70 to 80 cases at a time. He says of that work, "The stakes are a lot higher in that world than whether or not my book gets attention. On a given day, I have someone who really needs my help on a serious matter."[3]
Career
In 2008, De La Pava self-published his first novel, A Naked Singularity through XLibris.[4] In October 2010, literary site The Quarterly Conversation ran a review by Scott Bryan Wilson that called the book "one of the best and most original novels of the decade" and "a towering, impressive work."[5] That review caught the eye of staff at The University of Chicago Press, who signed the book up and published it in paperback in April 2012. The book was named one of the ten best works of fiction of 2012 by The Wall Street Journal.[6] In the Chicago Tribune, Julia Keller wrote, "A Naked Singularity is not about physics. It's about the American criminal justice system in a large and chaotic city, a place slowly crushed by hopelessness in the same way that an ancient star is gradually crushed by gravity. . . . It is about a city that teeters on the edge of total collapse and complete disaster, but that has the capacity to right itself (whew!) at the last possible second."[1] A Naked Singularity went on to win the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize from PEN as the best debut novel of that year.[7] On February 10, 2014, it was named one of eight books on the shortlist for the inaugural Folio Prize for the best book published in the United Kingdom in 2013.[8]
In April 2011, De La Pava self-published his second novel, Personae. The University of Chicago Press published a new paperback edition of that book in September 2013. In the Wall Street Journal, Sam Sacks wrote, "[I]n this willfully cryptic book, Mr. De La Pava's sense of moral urgency is ever-present. In only his early 40s, he is already a writer of mercurial brilliance, and even his strangest detours are worth following",[9] and Bookforum called it " the most galvanizing meditation on the possibilities and ramifications of artistic process that I have read in recent memory."[10]
Works
- Novels
- 2008: A Naked Singularity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press) ISBN 978-0-226-14179-4
- 2011: Personae (Chicago: University of Chicago Press) ISBN 978-0-226-07899-1
- 2018: Lost Empress (Pantheon)[11]
- Articles and essays
- 2010: "A Day's Sail", published by Triple Canopy [12]
Notes
- ^ a b Julia Keller. "The 'Naked' Truth", Chicago Tribune, May 31, 2012.
- ^ Lauren Sandler. 27. Because This Public Defender Is Also a PEN Award–Winning Novelist. New York Magazine, December 12, 2013.
- ^ Pia Catton. "Author find his own way, to success", The Wall Street Journal, June 17, 2012.
- ^ Garth Risk Hallberg. "Outside the Ring: A Profile of Sergio De La Pava", The Millions, June 20, 2012.
- ^ Scott Bryan Wilson. "Reviewed: A Naked Singularity by Sergio de la Pava". The Quarterly Conversation, October 4, 2010.
- ^ "The Best Fiction of 2012", The Wall Street Journal, December 14, 2012.
- ^ "2013 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize", PEN America.
- ^ Mark Brown, "The Folio Prize announces inaugural shortlist of eight books", The Guardian, February 10, 2014.
- ^ Sam Sacks. "Fiction Chronicle: A Crime without a Solution", The Wall Street Journal, October 4, 2013.
- ^ J. W. McCormack. Personae by Sergio De La Pava. November 1, 2013.
- ^ Dee, Jonathan. "A Public Defender's Polyphonic Novel of Football and Social Justice". The New Yorker. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
- ^ Sergio De La Pava, "A Day’s Sail", Triple Canopy.