Stephen Alter

Stephen Alter (born 1956) is an author of non-fiction and fiction, who was born and raised in India, where he grew up as the son of American missionaries.[1] He lives in Littleton, Colorado.

He graduated from Woodstock School (where his father, Robert Alter,[2] served as Principal from 1968 to 1978) in Landour and subsequently from Wesleyan University.

He has taught writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at the American University in Cairo. He has been awarded Fulbright Program and Guggenheim Fellowship grants and received an honorary degree from Wesleyan University. He is the founding director of the Mussoorie Mountain Festival. His most recent non-fiction book Becoming a Mountain: Himalayan Journeys in Search of the Sacred and the Sublime received the 2015 Kekoo Naoroji Award for Himalayan Literature. His most recent novel about Jim Corbett In the Jungles of the Night was shortlisted for the 2017 DSC Prize for South Asian Literature.

Selected titles

Non-Fiction
  • All the Way to Heaven: An American Boyhood in the Himalayas (1998)
  • Amritsar to Lahore: A Journey Across the India-Pakistan Border (2000)
  • Sacred Waters: A Pilgrimage Up the Ganges River to the Source of Hindu Culture (2001)
  • Elephas Maximus: A Portrait of the Indian Elephant (2004)
  • Fantasies of a Bollywood Love Thief (2007)
  • Becoming a Mountain: Himalayan Journeys in Search of the Sacred and the Sublime (2014)
  • Wild Himalaya: A Natural History of the Greatest Mountain Range on Earth (2019)
Fiction
  • Neglected Lives (1979)
  • Silk and Steel (1980)
  • The Godchild (1988)
  • Renuka (1990)
  • Aripan & Other Stories (2005)
  • The Rataban Betrayal (2013)
  • In the Jungles of the Night: A Novel about Jim Corbett (2016)
  • The Dalliance of Leopards (2017)
For Young Readers
  • The Phantom Isles (2007)
  • Ghost Letters (2008)
  • The Secret Sanctuary (2015)
  • The Cloudfarers (2018)
Editor
  • The Penguin Book of Modern Indian Short Stories (2001)
gollark: Well, on the extreme end, it would probably work to uninstall and reinstall Windows.
gollark: Although I don't think most boards include separate SATA controllers, so that is quite odd.
gollark: The port running directly off the CPU or chipset, presumably.
gollark: Maybe the port has some electrical failure. Maybe the controller's hardware for that port specifically is broken.
gollark: You don't need SQL. Just write to a file.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.