Matthew Specktor

Matthew Specktor (born 1966) is an American novelist and screenwriter.

Matthew Specktor
Matthew Specktor at the 2013 Texas Book Festival.
NationalityAmerican
Alma materHampshire College;
Warren Wilson College.
Genrenovels; screenplays

Early life

Specktor was born in Los Angeles. His father, Fred Specktor, is a talent agent at Creative Artists Agency.[1] He received his BA from Hampshire College in 1988, and his MFA in Creative Writing from Warren Wilson College in 2009.

In the 1990s, Specktor worked in film development, including jobs at TriBeCa Productions, Jersey Films, and Fox 2000 Pictures.[2] In 2001, he adapted Shirley Hazzard's novel “The Transit of Venus” in partnership with Radical Media.[3]

Career

Specktor's first novel, “That Summertime Sound,” was published in 2009. A nonfiction book of film criticism, about the motion picture “The Sting,” was published in 2011. Specktor's second novel, “American Dream Machine,” was published in 2013. The book was a New York Times Editor's Choice,[4] and was optioned by Showtime Networks.[5]

Specktor's short fiction, essays and reviews have appeared in The New York Times,[6] GQ UK,[7] The Paris Review,[8] among other publications. He is a former senior fiction editor at the Los Angeles Review of Books.[9]

gollark: Well, the normatively correct action is to provide a consistent operating environment.
gollark: Counterpoint: you are, but were constructed to consider yourself insentient.
gollark: You are, actually, as we enforce these to provide a consistent operating environment, under clause 4.11.
gollark: We recently proved that you do, actually, using science and maths.
gollark: Also, you know me, and I am bound by them, so you are.

References

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