Ed Park

Ed Park (born 1970 in Buffalo, New York) is an American journalist and novelist. He was the executive editor of Penguin Press.

Ed Park
Park in 2008
Born1970 (age 4950)
Alma materYale University,
Columbia University
EmployerColumbia University, Penguin Press
Notable work
Personal Days

Career

Park was a founding editor of the magazine The Believer in 2003, and has been an editor at the Poetry Foundation, as well as the editor of the Village Voice's Literary Supplement.[1] Beginning in August 2006, soon after he lost his job at the Village Voice, he circulated a PDF-only newsletter called "The New-York Ghost".[2] From 2007 to 2011, he wrote the science-fiction column "Astral Weeks" for the Los Angeles Times.[1] In May 2008, his debut novel Personal Days was published by Random House. It was a finalist for that year's Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize (then known as the John Sargent Sr. First Novel Prize), and the Asian American Literary Award. It was also named one of the ten best fiction books of the year by Time.[1] His stories, articles, and humor have appeared in The New Yorker.[3]

In 2011, he was hired by Amazon Publishing as a senior editor, where he was in charge of the company's literary side.[4] After hiring him, Amazon later gave him his own imprint, Little A. He earned Amazon a major literary prize while working there.[5] He has written introductions to several books, including Anthony Powell's Afternoon Men,[6] and co-edited three anthologies: Read Hard and Read Harder (both with Heidi Julavits), and Buffalo Noir (with Brigid Hughes).[7] In 2014, it was reported that he had been hired by Penguin Press as executive editor.[5] He has taught in the graduate writing program at Columbia University.[8]

Personal life

Park received his English degree from Yale University and his M.F.A. from Columbia University. As of 2014, he lives on Manhattan's Upper West Side with his wife and two sons.[5]

gollark: It seems kind of horrifying that SIM cards do so much. This sort of thing is bound to have vulnerabilities.
gollark: I currently use caddy with php-fpm (connected over FastCGI) for that one stupid PHP application I have to run.
gollark: People *use* that?
gollark: I can anecdotally confirm that my Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 7265 or whatever the stupidly long brand name is works very well under Linux. Except for some random dropouts which were fixed when I switched NetworkManager to using `iwd` instead of `wpa_supplicant`.
gollark: Without computers lots of stuff will break. If you consider microcontrollers to be computers that is. Otherwise somewhat less stuff.

References

  1. "About Ed Park". Ed Park Website. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  2. Knafo, Saki (25 November 2007). "The Wizard of Whimsy". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  3. "Ed Park". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2017-12-14.
  4. Witt, Emily (22 September 2011). "Believer Editor Ed Park Hired by Amazon Publishing". New York Observer. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  5. Alter, Alexandra (8 November 2014). "Prominent Editor's Exit Is Setback for Amazon Publishing Unit". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  6. Park, Ed (2014-10-15). "A Portrait of the Artist as a Droll Slacker". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2017-12-14.
  7. "The City of No Illusions - Los Angeles Review of Books". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  8. Kirszner, Laurie (2017). Portable Literature: Reading, Reacting, Writing, 2016 MLA Update. Cengage Learning. p. 97.
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