Community Page
- www.newcritics.com Jump to website »
-
Subscribe -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Popular Threads
-
Recent Comments
- The RE agent drop in income story has other facets.Agents incomes are way down. The figures calculated are probably directionally correct overall. What makes things worse for the agents is that...
- This photograph reminds me of my childhood days when I use to get wet in rains & enjoy a lot.
- George Zimbell has done a marvellous job. The photographs are very good.
- Hero, and more) and periodically will have <a href="http://www.nfcuorginfo.com">nfcu</a> appearances by TNA stars such as the Motorcity Machine Guns, Samoa Joe, and Eric...
- Good post. Finds very interesting.
newcritics
the best in web criticism
An hour ago I would have said my week couldn’t get any worse. I would have been sorely mistaken.
Terrible news: The great Grace Paley, feminist, activist, and until today one of our best living short story writers, has died. Leora Skolkin-Smith (whose fiction Paley create ... Continue reading »
Terrible news: The great Grace Paley, feminist, activist, and until today one of our best living short story writers, has died. Leora Skolkin-Smith (whose fiction Paley create ... Continue reading »
1 year ago
I loved your description of you first meeting her. And thanks for all the links. I've got a lot of reading to do.
1 year ago
1 year ago
1 year ago
Grace Paley, the first recipient of the Edith Wharton Citation of Merit, was born in the Bronx in 1922. She is the author of three highly acclaimed collections of short fiction--The Little Disturbances of Man (1959), Enormous Changes at the Last Minute (1974), and Later the Same Day (1985)--as well as three collections of poetry, including Leaning Forward, also published in 1985. Ms. Paley has taught at Columbia and Syracuse Universitites, and currently teaches at both City College of New York, where she is writer-in-residence, and Sarah Lawrence College, where she has taught creative writing and literature for 18 years. She received a Guggenheim fellowhsip in 1961, a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1966, and an award from the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1970. She is a member of the Executive Board of P.E.N. Actively involved in anti-war, feminist and anti-nuclear movements, Ms. Paley has been a member of the War Resisters' League, Resist, and Women's Pentagon Action, and was one of the founders of the Greenwich Village Peace Center in 1961; she regards herself as a "somewhat combative pacifist and cooperative anarchist." Ms. Paley has two children and one grandchild, and divides her time between New York City and Thetford Hill, Vermont. In Spring 1987, Ms. Paley was awarded a Senior Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts, in recognition of her lifetime contribution to literature.