Amina Gautier is an American writer and academic. She is the author of four short story collections, many individual stories, as well as works of literary criticism.
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Early life and education
editGautier was born and raised in New York. After participating in Prep for Prep, she attended the Nightingale Bamford School before graduating from Northfield Mount Hermon.[1] She then attended Stanford, where she earned bachelor's and master's degrees in English literature. She continued her education at the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned a master's degree and a Ph.D. in English literature.
She held a Mellon Minority Undergraduate Fellowship at Stanford University, a Fontaine Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania, a Mitchem Dissertation Fellowship at Marquette University, and a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Washington University in St. Louis.
Career
editGautier is a scholar of 19th century American literature. She has written criticism of the 19th-century American authors Charles W. Chesnutt, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Elleanor Eldridge, Benjamin Franklin, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Walt Whitman. Her critical essays and reviews have appeared in African American Review, Belles Lettres, Daedalus, Journal of American History, Libraries and Culture, Nineteenth Century Contexts and Whitman Noir. She has received fellowships from the Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA), the Social Science Research Council and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation.
Writing
editGautier has published more than 85 short stories. Her fiction has appeared in a wide variety of magazines and story collections, and some of her stories have been reprinted in anthologies.
Teaching
editGautier has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Marquette University, Saint Joseph's University, Washington University in St. Louis, and DePaul University. In fall 2014, she joined the faculty in the MFA program at the University of Miami.[2]
Honors
editGautier has been the recipient of the Crazyhorse Prize,[3] the Danahy Fiction Prize, the Jack Dyer Prize, the William Richey Prize, the Schlafly Microfiction Award and the Lamar York Prize in Fiction.[citation needed]
- 2011: Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction[4]
- 2013: Prairie Schooner Book Prize for Now We Will Be Happy[5]
- 2018: PEN/Malamud Award[6][7]
Works
edit- At-Risk. University of Georgia Press, 2011.
- Now We Will Be Happy. University of Nebraska Press, 2014.
- The Loss of All Lost Things. Elixir Press, 2016.
- The Best That You Can Do. Soft Skull Press, 2024.
References
edit- ^ Amina Gautier's website
- ^ Jeffrey Condran, "Now We Will Be Happy by Amina Gautier", Necessary Fiction, January 11, 2016. Archived April 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Amina Gautier" interviewed by Derek Alger, PIF Magazine June 1, 2012
- ^ Richard Thomas, "Review of At-risk, by Amina Gautier", The Nervous Breakdown, October 15, 2012. Archived October 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Prairie Schooner Book Prize past winners: Now We Will Be Happy". Prairie Schooner
- "Now We Will Be Happy", Publishers Weekly.
- "Jaquira Díaz interviews Amina Gautier", Los Angeles Review of Books, November 25, 2015
- "NOW WE WILL BE HAPPY by Amina Gautier", Kirkus Reviews, September 16, 2014 - ^ "Awards: PEN/Malamud; Innovations in Reading; Nautilus". Shelf Awareness. May 11, 2018. Archived from the original on September 26, 2021. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
- ^ "2018 Winners". The PEN/Faulkner Foundation. Archived from the original on July 31, 2019. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
External links
edit- University of Miami faculty page
- Interview with Gautier, Derek Alger, pif Magazine (2012)
- Interview with Gautier, Julia Brown, Mosaic Magazine (2016)
- Interview with Gautier, Claire Martin, Hair Trigger (2017)
- Interview with Gautier, Jennifer Maritza McCauley, Fiction Writers Review (2018)
- Interview with Gautier, Bret Meier, Pleiades (2019)
- Interview with Gautier, Arts and Letters, NPR (2020)