Alyson Richman
Alyson Richman is an American writer best known for The Lost Wife, a tale of a husband and wife who are separated in a concentration camp during World War II and reunited 60 years later at their grandchildren's wedding.[1] Her novels have been published in more than 15 languages and have received both national and international acclaim.[2]
Alyson Richman | |
---|---|
Occupation | novelist |
Notable works | The Lost Wife |
Website | |
www |
Background
Richman graduated from Wellesley College in 1994[3] and received a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship.[4] She currently lives with her husband in Long Island, New York.
Bibliography
- The Mask Carver's Son: A Novel (Bloomsbury 2001)[3]
- The Rhythm of Memory (formerly entitled Swedish Tango: A Novel)[5] (Simon & Schuster 2004)[3]
- The Last Van Gogh: A Novel (Berkley 2006)[3]
- The Lost Wife (Berkley 2012)[4]
- Saint-Exupéry
- The Garden of Letters (Berkley 2014)[4]
gollark: Not particularly.
gollark: Well, 3.7GHz is the *max* clock of mine, I assume 2.1GHz is the minimum of theirs or it's actually really awful.
gollark: No.
gollark: The garage one, not the DO one.
gollark: ubq's is as good as mine for CPU and better for RAM, but Debian.
References
- Wendy Smith (29 Mar 2012). "Alyson Richman on her LI Reads pick 'The Lost Wife'". Newsday.com. Newsday. Retrieved 26 Sep 2014.
- "Alyson Richman and Jenna Blum - "Garden of Letters" and "Grand Central"". wellesleybooksmith-shop.com. Wellesley College. Retrieved 26 Sep 2014.
- "ALUMNAE AUTHORS". wellesley.edu. Wellesley College. Retrieved 26 Sep 2014.
- "Alyson Richman". berkleyjoveauthors.com/. Berkley Books. Archived from the original on 12 August 2014. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
- "Biography: Alyson Richman". bookreporter.com. Retrieved 26 Sep 2014.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.