Leigh Newman

Leigh Newman (born May 15, 1971)[1] is an American writer and editor. Her memoir about Alaska, Still Points North, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle's John Leonard First Book Prize.[2]

Leigh Newman
Born (1971-05-15) May 15, 1971
Anchorage, Alaska
OccupationEssayist, editor
NationalityAmerican
Alma materStanford University
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Period2003–present
GenreCreative nonfiction
Short stories
Notable worksStill Points North (2013)
Website
www.leigh-newman.com

Early life

Newman got her B.A. from Stanford University in 1993 and her MFA from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2006.

Personal life

Newman grew up in Anchorage, Alaska and Baltimore, Maryland, traveling between the two cities. She now lives in Brooklyn, New York with her husband and two boys.

Career

Her fiction, essays and book reviews have appeared in One Story, Tin House, The New York Times' Modern Love and The New York Times Book Review, Fiction, New York Tyrant, Vogue, O, The Oprah Magazine, Bookforum, Condé Nast Brides, Condé Nast Concierge, Travel Holiday, Ski, and Frommer’s Budget Travel.[3] She has served as Deputy Editor and Books Editor of Oprah.com and editor-at-large for the indie press Black Balloon Publishing.

Her memoir Still Points North is the story of Newman's unconventional childhood growing up in the wilds of Alaska as her parents' marriage falls apart.

Newman is a visiting writer at the Sarah Lawrence M.F.A. program.[4]

Honors

She has received fiction fellowships from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the Atlantic Center for the Arts and the Corporation of Yaddo.[5] In 2014, she was a Bread Loaf Writers' Conference Fellow.[6] Newman won the 2020 Terry Southern Prize awarded by The Paris Review honoring work of “humor, wit, and sprezzatura".[7]

Bibliography

Memoir

Collections

  • The Collected Traveler book series (2009, Crown)
  • My Parents Were Awesome (2011, Villard)
  • One Ring Zero’s The Recipe Project (2011, Black Balloon) - co-editor
gollark: I use PRIME, as documented on the Arch wiki somewhere; you can instruct the dedicated GPU to render certain programs and send them to the integrated GPU.
gollark: > 5. nouveauHAHAHAHAHA> 4. switching GPUs in a laptop?They have integrated GPUs and discrete ones.
gollark: Declarative macro-y languages could be parallelized quite well through analyzing their dependency trees.
gollark: Lisps and stuff are actually different.
gollark: Those are fairly C-like with the main difference being better memory management and some level of object orientation.

References

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