Natalie Kusz

Natalie Kusz (born 1962) is an American memoirist.

Natalie Kusz
Born1962 (age 5758)
OccupationMemomorist
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks

Life

She graduated from University of Alaska Fairbanks with a B.A. and an M.F.A. She taught at Bethel College, and Harvard University. She teaches at Eastern Washington University.[1][2] Her work appeared in O, Harper's,[3] Threepenny Review, McCall's,[4] Real Simple, and The New York Times.[5]

Awards

Works

  • Road Song. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 1990. ISBN 978-0-374-52827-0.

Anthologies

Reviews

The author of this memoir has suffered so much in her 27 years that writing about it involved a risk. "Road Song" could have been a saccharine tract about the triumph of the human spirit or such a painful tale that even reading it would hurt. Instead it's a calm, reflective affirmation of family love.[7]

gollark: SPUDNET keys are now managed by the SPUDNET-HKI system, so I can just deactivate a leaked key.
gollark: The disk signing key has remained uncompromised... forever... somehow.
gollark: No, you had the SPUDNET backdoor key.
gollark: 3 4 7.23488 pi 6-5i
gollark: Ooh, are we posting numbers?

References

  1. http://www.ewu.edu/x66291.xml
  2. http://www.ewumfa.com/kusz.htm
  3. "Natalie Kusz | Harper's Magazine". Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  4. McCall's. McCall Publishing Company. 1990-01-01.
  5. http://www.spokesmanreview.com/interactive/bookclub/interviews/interview.asp?IntID=31
  6. Affairs, Harvard Office of News and Public. "Thirty-Eight Women Appointed Fellows at Bunting Institute". www.news.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  7. Cyra McFadden (December 16, 1990). "'Get Lost, Buddy, I've Done My Time'". The New York Times.
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