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The Best American Essays 2013

Page 38

by Robert Atwan


  STEVEN HARVEY is the author of three books of personal essays: A Geometry of Lilies, Lost in Translation, and Bound for Shady Grove. He has also edited an anthology of essays on middle age, written by men, called In a Dark Wood. He is a professor of English and creative writing at Young Harris College as well as a founding member of the nonfiction faculty in the Ashland University MFA program in creative writing. He lives in the north Georgia mountains.

  WILLIAM MELVIN KELLEY is the author of three novels—the award-winning A Different Drummer, A Drop of Patience, and Dunfords Travels Everywheres—and a short story collection, Dancers on the Shore. In 2008 he won the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for Lifetime Achievement. He has taught creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College since 1989. He lives with his family in Harlem and has recently completed his fourth novel, Dis/Integration.

  JON KERSTETTER completed three combat tours in Iraq as an army physician and flight surgeon. He earned an MD degree at the Mayo Medical School, an MS in business from the University of Utah, and an MFA in creative nonfiction from Ashland University. Dr. Kerstetter’s medical career included practice in emergency and military medicine, disaster relief, and education in emergency medicine in Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Honduras. He was the in-country director of the Johns Hopkins training program in emergency medicine at the University of Phristina in Kosovo. He retired from medical practice and the military in 2009 and resides in Iowa City with his wife.

  WALTER KIRN is the national correspondent for the New Republic. He is the author of several novels, including Thumbsucker and Up in the Air, which were made into feature films. His most recent book is a memoir of his education, Lost in the Meritocracy. He lives in Montana and California.

  MICHELLE MIRSKY lives and writes in Austin, Texas, where she also works an earnest nine-to-five job, kind of like a superhero with a secret identity. Only not super. Or secret. She was the winner of the grand prize in the 2011 McSweeney’s column contest. Her essays have appeared in McSweeney’s and in print.

  ANDER MONSON is the author of, most recently, Letter to a Future Lover (forthcoming in 2015), short essays on six-by-nine-inch cards written in and on libraries and things found in libraries and thereafter published back into the spaces where they originated, and eventually collected, unordered, into a box, which he supposes is a book, since it is after all bound and collected there.

  ANGELA MORALES’s most recent essays have appeared in the Harvard Review, the Baltimore Review, the Southern Review, and River Teeth. She holds an MFA in nonfiction writing from the University of Iowa. Currently she teaches English at Glendale Community College and is working on a collection of autobiographical essays.

  ALICE MUNRO is the author of Dear Life: Stories. Her recent collections include The View from Castle Rock and Too Much Happiness. In 2009 she was awarded the Man Booker International Prize.

  EILEEN POLLACK’s most recent novel, Breaking and Entering, was awarded the 2012 Grub Street National Book Prize and named a New York Times Editors’ Choice selection. She is also the author of Paradise, New York (a novel) and two collections of short fiction, In the Mouth and The Rabbi in the Attic, as well as a work of creative nonfiction called Woman Walking Ahead: In Search of Catherine Weldon and Sitting Bull and two innovative textbooks, Creative Nonfiction and Creative Composition. “Pigeons” is an excerpt from her memoir in progress, Approaching Infinity. She teaches in the MFA program at the University of Michigan.

  KEVIN SAMPSELL is the author of the memoir A Common Pornography (2010) and the novel This Is Between Us (2013). His essays and fiction have appeared in Nerve, Hobart, the Good Men Project, the Rumpus, the Fairy Tale Review, NANO Fiction, the Associated Press, and elsewhere. He lives in Portland, Oregon, with his wife and son.

  RICHARD SCHMITT is the author of The Aerialist, a novel (2001), and has published in the Cimarron Review, the Gettysburg Review, Gulf Coast, Puerto del Sol, and other places. His story “Leaving Venice, Florida,” won first prize in the Mississippi Review short story contest and was anthologized in New Stories of the South: The Year’s Best 1999. Schmitt has been nominated for multiple Pushcart Prizes and was the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts grant in 2002.

  DAVID SEARCY lives in Dallas, Texas. His first collection of essays, Shame and Wonder, will be published in 2014.

  ZADIE SMITH is the author of four novels, White Teeth (2000), The Autograph Man (2002), On Beauty (2005), which won the Orange Prize for Fiction, and NW (2012). She is also the author of Changing My Mind: Occasional Essays (2009) and the editor of a story collection, The Book of Other People (2007). She has taught creative writing at New York University since 2010.

  MEGAN STIELSTRA is the literary director of 2nd Story, a personal narrative performance series dedicated to bringing people together through story. She has told stories for all sorts of theaters, festivals, and bars, including the Goodman, Steppenwolf, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago Poetry Center, Story Week, Wordstock, Neo-Futurarium, and Chicago Public Radio. Her story collection, Everyone Remain Calm, was a Chicago Tribune Favorite of 2011, and her writing has appeared in the Rumpus, Pank, Other Voices, f Magazine, Make Magazine, the Nervous Breakdown, Swink, and elsewhere. She teaches creative writing and performance at Columbia College Chicago and the University of Chicago, and her debut essay collection is forthcoming in spring 2014.

  JOHN JEREMIAH SULLIVAN is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and the southern editor of the Paris Review. He writes for GQ, Harper’s Magazine, and Oxford American and is the author of Blood Horses and Pulphead, a 2011 National Book Critics Circle Award nominee. Sullivan lives in Wilmington, North Carolina.

  VANESSA VESELKA is the author of the novel Zazen, which won the 2012 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for fiction. Her short stories have appeared in Tin House and ZYZZYVA, and her nonfiction is found in GQ, the Atlantic, the American Reader, and Salon.com. She has also been, at times, a teenage runaway, a union organizer, a student of paleontology, a train-hopper, a waitress, and a mother.

  MATTHEW VOLLMER is the author of Future Missionaries of America, a collection of stories, and Inscriptions for Headstones, a collection of essays, each crafted as an epitaph and each unfolding in a single sentence. With David Shields, he is coeditor of Fakes: An Anthology of Pseudo-Interviews, Faux-Lectures, Quasi-Letters, “Found” Texts, and Other Fraudulent Artifacts. His work has appeared in a variety of literary magazines, including the Paris Review, Glimmer Train, Tin House, Virginia Quarterly Review, Epoch, Ecotone, New England Review, elimae, DIAGRAM, the Normal School, the Carolina Quarterly, Oxford American, and the Sun. A recent winner of an NEA fellowship, he is an assistant professor at Virginia Tech, where he directs the undergraduate creative writing program.

  Although she is “originally from” Shanghai, VICKI WEIQI YANG currently resides in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood, where she studies political science at the University of Chicago. Her research interests include structures of governance, political theory, and security in East Asia. She has yet to muster the mettle required to call herself a writer, so she prefers the term student.

  MAKO YOSHIKAWA is currently at work on a memoir about her father. She is the author of the novels One Hundred and One Ways and Once Removed. Her work has been translated into six languages; awards for her writing include a Radcliffe Fellowship. As a literary critic she has published articles that explore the relationship between incest and race in twentieth-century American fiction. Her essays have appeared in the Missouri Review and the Southern Indiana Review. She is a professor of creative writing at Emerson College, Boston.

  Notable Essays of 2012

  SELECTED BY ROBERT ATWAN

  ANWAR F. ACCAWI

  The Camel, The Sun, October.

  JOAN ACOCELLA

  Once upon a Time, The New Yorker, July 23.

  JUDITH ADKINS

  The Tree, the Forest, Colorado Review, Fall/Winter.

  JERRY ADLER

  Raging Bulls, Wired, September.

&nb
sp; JASON ALBERT

  Down and Out in a Repurposed Troop Carrier, Morning News, August 27.

  PAMELA ALEXANDER

  Brush of Wildness, Cimarron Review, Fall.

  SUE ALLISON

  What I Did Without You, Crazyhorse, Spring.

  HILTON ALS

  I Am Your Conscious, I Am Love, Harper’s Magazine, December.

  AIMEE ANDERSON

  Indian Springs, Gargoyle, no. 58.

  DONALD ANDERSON

  Gathering Noise, Epoch, vol. 61, no. 2.

  ISAAC ANDERSON

  Lord God Bird, Image, no. 72.

  ANONYMOUS

  The Facts of the Matter, TriQuarterly, October 22.

  DAVID ANTIN

  White Ravens Black Helicopters, Southern Review, Spring.

  JACOB M. APPEL

  Livery, Southeast Review, vol. 30, no. 1.

  ELIZABETH ARNOLD

  Crossing the Divide, Gettysburg Review, Autumn.

  ALAN ARRIVEE

  The Appropriate Use of Hands, Florida Review, Summer.

  CHRIS ARTHUR

  Looking Behind “Nothing’s” Door, Hotel Amerika, Spring.

  OLUMAYOWA ATTE

  Road to Ibadan, New Letters, vol. 79, no. 1.

  TIMOTHY AUBRY

  Sizing Up Oprah, The Point, Spring.

  LAURA JEAN BAKER

  Year of the Tiger, War, Literature, and the Arts, no. 24.

  ROSECRANS BALDWIN

  Our French Connection, Morning News, May 29.

  RICK BAROT

  Morandi Sonnet, ZYZZYVA, Winter.

  JOHN BARTH

  The End?, Granta, Winter.

  RICK BASS

  The Larch: A Love Story, Orion, September/October.

  ELISSA BASSIST

  The Never-to-Be Bride, New York Times, Sunday, April 29.

  CHARLES BAXTER

  Undoings: An Essay in Three Parts, Colorado Review, Spring.

  CRIS BEAM

  Mother, Stranger, Atavist, January.

  MARK BEAVER

  Taxidermy, Third Coast, Fall.

  LOUIS BEGLEY

  My Europe, New York Review of Books, April 5.

  THOMAS BELLER

  The Fun of Bad Business, Oxford American, no. 77.

  GEOFFREY BENT

  The Virtuoso, Boulevard, Fall.

  MISCHA BERLINSKI

  A Farewell to Haiti, New York Review of Books, March 22.

  FLYNN BERRY

  Surfing, Los Angeles Review, Fall.

  SASKIA BEUDEL

  Ground Glass, Iowa Review, Spring.

  JILL BIALOSKY

  How to Say Good-Bye, Real Simple, February.

  SVEN BIRKERTS

  It Wants to Find You, Agni, no. 76.

  ALTHEA BLACK

  Essay to be Read at 3 A.M., Narrative.

  KATHLEEN BLACKBURN

  Where Now Is, River Teeth, Fall.

  JUDY BLUNT

  Occupying the Real West, New Letters, vol. 78, nos. 3 & 4.

  BELLE BOGGS

  The Art of Waiting, Orion, March/April.

  JOE BONOMO

  Live Nude Essay! Gulf Coast, Winter/Spring.

  ROBERT BOYERS

  My “Others,” Yale Review, January.

  NATHANIEL BRODIE

  Sparks, Creative Nonfiction, Spring.

  STEVEN MATTHEW BROWN

  Rest Stop Apologia, Black Warrior Review, Spring/Summer.

  LINDA BUCKMASTER

  Becoming Memory, Upstreet, no. 8.

  RACHEL IDA BUFF

  All the Strange Hours: A Taxonomy, Southern Review, Winter.

  FRANK BURES

  The Fall of the Creative Class, Thirty Two, July/August.

  TRACY BURKHOLDER

  Proof, Cincinnati Review, Summer.

  CARAND BURNET

  Axis, Gulf Coast, Summer/Fall.

  FRANKLIN BURROUGHS

  For What Blood Was Worth, Sewanee Review, Summer.

  STEPHEN BURT

  On Growing Up Between Genders, New Haven Review, Summer.

  SAM BUTLER

  Elvis Presley Has Been Avenged, Gettysburg Review, Winter.

  PETER BYRNE

  Cliché Bound in Naples, Able Muse, Summer.

  BILL CAPOSSERE

  Strange Travelers, Colorado Review, Fall/Winter.

  ANNE CARSON

  We Point the Bone, Tin House, no. 52.

  OSCAR CÁSARES

  My Name Is Cásares, Texas Monthly, November.

  MAUD CASEY

  A Stubborn Desire, A Public Space, no. 15.

  FRANK CASSESE

  It Doesn’t Mean We’re Wasting Our Time, Guernica, November 1.

  MAURICIO CASTILLO

  MD, ☺, American Journal of Neuroradiology, September.

  LESLIE CATON

  Do You Really Want a Bird?, Wapsipinicon Almanac, no. 19.

  JANE CAWTHORNE

  Something as Big as a Mountain, Prism, Spring.

  MELISSA CHADBURN

  The Throwaways, The Rumpus, January 25.

  MAY-LEE CHAI

  The Blue Boot, Missouri Review, Summer.

  STEVEN CHURCH

  Fight, Bull, Prairie Schooner, Winter.

  ANDREW D. COHEN

  Searching for Benny Paret, Normal School, Spring.

  PAULA MARANTZ Cohen

  The Meanings of Forgery, Southwest Review, vol. 97, no. 1.

  RACHEL COHEN

  Gold, Golden, Gilded, Glittering, The Believer, November/December.

  RICH COHEN

  Pirate City, Paris Review, Summer.

  BARBARA FLUG COLIN

  Now Let’s Stare at the Purple, Teachers & Writers Magazine, Winter.

  WILHEMINA CONDON

  Walnut and Vine, North Dakota Quarterly, vol. 77, no. 4.

  ELI CONNAUGHTON

  Burial, Alligator Juniper, 2012.

  REBECCA COOK

  Flame, Southeast Review, vol. 30, no. 1.

  MARTHA COOLEY

  Go Tell Your Father, Agni, no. 76.

  MARAYA CORNELL

  Landslides, Antioch Review, Spring.

  ROGER CONANT CRANSE

  The Hearts and Minds Guys, Raritan, Fall.

  PAUL CRENSHAW

  When the War Began, War, Literature, and the Arts, no. 24.

  RUTH W. CROCKER

  Sam’s Way, Gettysburg Review, Spring.

  DEBORAH CUMMINS

  Names: Remaking the Calendar, Under the Sun, Summer.

  CHARLES D’AMBROSIO

  True Believer, Tin House, no. 53.

  JIM DAMERON

  All Ages Were Represented, Missouri Review, Summer.

  MEGHAN DAUM

  Haterade, The Believer, January.

  JOHN DEBON

  It’s Like When Your Mom Dies, Concho River Review, Spring.

  JENNIFER DE LEON

  The White Space, Fourth Genre, Spring.

  SUSAN DETWEILER

  Under the Cloud, Missouri Review, Winter.

  AILEEN DILLANE

  Jim, Across the Road, New Hibernia Review, Spring.

  KENT H. DIXON

  Sharkwalker, Florida Review, Summer.

  CHRIS DOMBROWSKI

  Chance Baptisms, Orion, July/August.

  JOE DONAVAN

  Nonfiction Love, Gold Man Review, no. 1.

  MARTHA ANDREWS DONOVAN

  Dangerous Archeology, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Spring/Summer.

  MATT DONOVAN

  The House of Vettii, Cutbank, no. 77.

  MARK DOSTERT

  Shorties, Ascent, August 12.

  JACQUELINE DOYLE

  The Tyranny of Things, South Dakota Review, Spring.

  REGINA DREXLER

  Landslide, Colorado Review, Spring.

  ANDRE DUBUS III

  Writing & Publishing a Memoir: What in the Hell Have I Done?, River Teeth, Fall.

  IRINA ALEXANDRA DUMITRESCU

  Tasting Texas, Southwest Review, vol. 97, no. 1.

  LENA DUN
HAM

  First Love, The New Yorker, August 13 & 20.

  MEENAKSHI GIGI DURHAM

  Hunger Pangs, Iowa Review, Fall.

  GEOFF DYER

  Street View, The Believer, June.

  MARK EDMUNDSON

 

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