Joe Meno

Joe Meno (born 1974) is a novelist, writer of short fiction, playwright, and music journalist based in Chicago.

Joe Meno

Biography

After attending Columbia College Chicago, Meno spent time working as a flower delivery truck driver and art therapy teacher at a juvenile detention center. His first novel Tender as Hellfire was published when he was only 24 and received strong reviews from sources like Library Journal. His short fiction has appeared in literary magazines like TriQuarterly, Ninth Letter, Joyland: A hub for short fiction, and Other Voices. He currently teaches fiction writing at Columbia College Chicago. He is a frequent contributor to Punk Planet magazine, where his comic strip Iceberg Town is featured.

Selected bibliography

Plays

  • The Boy Detective Fails.
  • Once Upon a Time or the Secret Language of Birds.
  • Star Witness.

Musicals

  • The Boy Detective Fails.[4]

Awards

Nelson Algren Award, 2003 a prize for short fiction given by the Chicago Tribune.

Hairstyles of the Damned was selected for the Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers program for its November 2004-January 2005 season.

Bluebirds Used to Croon in the Choir was selected as the winner of the Society of Midland Author's Award for Fiction 2005.

Demons in the Spring was a finalist for The Story Prize in 2009.

The Great Perhaps was a winner of the Great Lakes Book Award for Fiction in 2009 and a New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice.

gollark: I'm not sure that the subsidies are the problem exactly.
gollark: The only ways to make money are to post memes and get investment commissions, or to get someone else to throw away their money, and it happens that subsidies make it so that that other person can happily just throw away money forever and not be an actual person.
gollark: Make the system actually sane? This is the "problem" season 1 had with bots - it was broken so they could do a lot.
gollark: Evil idea: make a bot which reposts random memes off some niche subreddit (so nobody will notice) with the picture fuzzed a bit so repost detectors won't notice it.
gollark: Oops.

References

  1. Review of the book in the New York Times, June 12th, 2009.
  2. Review of the book in the New York Times, October 5th, 2012.
  3. Review of the book in the New York Times, September 11th, 2015.
  4. http://www.playbill.com/article/dcs-signature-plans-four-new-musicals-writers-include-adam-gwon-hunter-foster-and-more-com-177924

Sources

  • Gale Online Literature Resource Center. Updated June, 2003.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.