Laura Miller (writer)

Laura Miller is an American journalist and critic based in New York City. She is a co-founder of Salon.com.[1]

Biography

Miller was raised as a Catholic and grew up in California. She has since said she deplores the Church's "guilt-mongering and tedious rituals."[2]

Career

In 1995, Miller helped to co-found Salon.com. She has been a frequent contributor to the New York Times Book Review, where she wrote the "Last Word" column for two years. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, the Los Angeles Times, Time, the Wall Street Journal, The Guardian and other publications.

In 2000 she edited The Salon.com Reader's Guide to Contemporary Authors with Adam Begley.[3] She is the author of The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia, a book about C.S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia fantasy series, her enchantment with it as a child, and her disenchantment with it when she realized its heavy-handed Christian parallels as an adult.[4]

Currently she is Slate's Books and Culture columnist.[5]

Bibliography

Books

  • Miller, Laura (2008). The magician's book : a skeptic's adventures in Narnia. Little, Brown.
  • (2016). Literary wonderlands : a journey through the greatest fictional worlds ever created. Black Dog & Leventhal.

Essays, reporting and other contributions

gollark: Not sure how that works, but okay.
gollark: Energy is apparently mass times distance squared over time squared.
gollark: Power is energy over time.
gollark: knowledge is knowledge.
gollark: "you should THANK ME for being PROACTIVE in reporting POSSIBLE TERRORISM"

References

  1. "Reviewers & Critics: Laura Miller of Slate". Poets & Writers. 2017-02-15. Retrieved 2019-08-19.
  2. "The Magician's Book Conjures the Magic of Narnia by Review-a-Day". www.powells.com. Retrieved 2019-08-19.
  3. "The Millions: The Salon.com Reader's Guide to Contemporary Authors by Laura Miller". Retrieved 2019-08-19.
  4. The Magician's Book. 2017-06-27.
  5. "Laura Miller". Slate Magazine. Retrieved 2019-08-19.
  6. Online version is titled "'Golden Hill' : a crackerjack novel of old Manhattan".
  7. Online version is titled "'Tangerine' : a début novel that delights in excess".
  8. Online version is titled "A twisted fairy tale about toxic masculinity".
  9. Online version is titled "A début novel remixes the trope of the missing girl".
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