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Nicole Stansbury

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Nicole Stansbury
BornMay 14, 1963
Whittier, California
OccupationWriter
NationalityAmerican

Nicole Stansbury (born May 14, 1963 in Whittier, California) is an American novelist, short story and essay writer. Her novel Places to Look for a Mother (2002) and her collection of short stories The Husband's Dilemma (2004) were published by Carroll & Graf, and her shorter works have appeared in The Threepenny Review, PRISM international, and Yellow Silk.

She earned a BA (1986) in English and an MFA (1991) in Creative Writing from the University of Utah. Stansbury has been honored numerous times for her work including several grants from the Utah Arts Council. Places to Look for a Mother won Stansbury the Barnes & Noble "Discover New Writers" award, and The Husband's Dilemma won the 2005 Utah Book Award.

Stansbury's works concern a range of issues including modern life in the western United States, particularly life in Utah. She has been praised for her insightful and compelling depiction of the life of non-Mormons in Mormon-dominated Utah, and more generally for her keen eye for telling detail.[1] The setting for most of her work is domestic: her first novel concerns a mother-daughter relationship in the midst of a disintegrating family. Her stories include tales of husbands, wives and children navigating the trauma of life in contemporary America, and is sometimes humorous and at other times harrowing.[2]

References

  1. ^ Naparsteck, Nartin. "O Mother, Who Art Thou?" The Salt Lake Tribune: July 7, 2002.
  2. ^ Beyerle, Shaazka. "Neurosis, Fidelity, Intertwined Cultures." The Washington Times: July 18, 2004.