Ann Bauer

Ann Bauer is an American essayist and novelist.[1]

Ann Bauer
Occupationnovelist
GenreFiction, Novel, Essay
Notable worksA Wild Ride Up the Cupboards (novel, 2005), The Forever Marriage (novel, 2012)
Website
www.annbauer.com

Life and career

Ann Bauer has worked as a writing professor, a food critic, a novelist, a journalist and an advertising copywriter. She has taught at The University of Iowa, Brown University, Roger Williams University, Johns Hopkins University and Macalester College.

While in the Iowa MFA program, Bauer wrote most of her first novel, A Wild Ride Up The Cupboards, which came out with Scribner[2] in 2005. Wild Ride was named a Best Book of 2005 by the Minneapolis Star Tribune and The Providence Journal. Bauer began writing for Salon that same year, eventually becoming a regular contributor. She co-authored her second book, a work of nonfiction billed as a "culinary memoir," with Mitch Omer, the founder of Hell's Kitchen. Damn Good Food was published by Borealis Books in 2009. Her second novel, The Forever Marriage, was published by The Overlook Press[3] in June 2012. Her third novel, Forgiveness 4 You was also published by Overlook in March 2015.

Works

Bauer's essays have appeared in Elle, The Washington Post,[4] The New York Times,[5] Redbook, and The Sun. She has published three novels and a cookbook and culinary memoir (with co-author Mitch Omer).

  • A Wild Ride Up The Cupboards (2005)
  • Damn Good Food (2009) With Mitch Omer
  • The Forever Marriage (June 2012)
  • Forgiveness 4 You (March 2015)
gollark: Generally you also have special-purpose libraries for various tasks as well as big frameworks for doing a lot of things.
gollark: Reading about this sort of thing often makes me feel better about my own programming projects.
gollark: Mostly you can, *after* you've downloaded the packages.
gollark: It's because pulling in external dependencies is more convenient than having to program everything yourself or whatever, although npm has gone too far with `is-number` and `is-thirteen` and whatever.
gollark: That's possible, yes. Most Node.js applications use a lot of packages, because npm.

References

  1. "Simon & Schuster".
  2. "A Wild Ride up the Cupboards".
  3. "The Forever Marriage". Archived from the original on 2018-12-31. Retrieved 2012-05-06.
  4. Bauer, Ann (July 20, 2008). "Autism: Where's the Support?". The Washington Post.
  5. Bauer, Ann (August 31, 2008). "Modern Love". The New York Times.
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