Laurie Stone
Laurie Stone (born 1946) is an American writer and critic. After many years as a journalist at The Village Voice (1974–1999), she was appointed theater critic for The Nation and critic-at-large on NPR's Fresh Air. Her books include a story collection, My Life as an Animal (Northwestern University Press), an essay collection, Laughing in the Dark (Ecco) and a novel, Starting with Serge (Doubleday).
In 1996, Stone won the Nona Balakian Excellence in Reviewing Award from the National Book Critics Circle.[1]
Education
Stone is a graduate of Barnard College (1968) and holds an MA from Columbia University (1969). She taught at Hunter College and Queens College from 1969 to 1975.
gollark: Well, people like plants and animals for aesthetic and companionship reasons.
gollark: I can probably track message processing rate and command execution rate without any awful problems.
gollark: I have a grafana/prometheus setup up now, and I thought "hmm, all things are to be graphed?!".
gollark: <@!509849474647064576>
gollark: I'm going to see if I can integrate ABR into my graphing system too now.
References
- "A Civil Action' Wins Critics' Award". New York Times. March 23, 1996. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
External links
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