Sarah Stonich
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Sarah Stonich is an American writer and editor based in
Minneapolis, Minnesota Minneapolis () is the largest city in Minnesota, United States, and the county seat of Hennepin County. The city is abundant in water, with thirteen lakes, wetlands, the Mississippi River, creeks and waterfalls. Minneapolis has its origins ...
. Her novel ''Vacationland'' was published by the University of Minnesota Press in April 2013.


Background and career

Novelist and screenwriter Sarah Stonich was born in Duluth, Minnesota. She moved to the Twin Cities in 1986, where she has worked in the literary community as a columnist, editor, and freelance writer. Her essays and short fiction have been published in '' Zyzzyva'', ''
Columbia Journal Columbia University (also known as Columbia, and officially as Columbia University in the City of New York) is a private research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Church in Manhattan ...
'', and '' Minnesota Monthly''. ''City Secrets: New York'' and many other magazines. Stonich has been a featured author at festivals and writer's conferences such as the San Miguel Allende Literary Conference, and the Aspen Writers Institute. She reviews books for the Minneapolis Star Tribune and other newspapers. She is also an editor and brander at WordStalkers. She has been a writer in residence at Hawthornden International Writer's Programme in Scotland; Ragdale Foundation in Chicago IL: The Tyrone Guthrie Centre in Ireland; The Michael King Writer's Center in Auckland, New Zealand; Art Omi in NY and Ucross in Wyoming, among others. Most recently Sarah has begun adapting her novels to television series and feature length scripts. She is married to musician Jon Ware and lives in Minneapolis. Stonich's first novel, ''These Granite Islands'', was originally published by Little Brown in 2001 and was translated into eleven languages, it won a Loft McKnight award, a Minnesota State Arts Board Award and the Friends of American Writers Award in addition to being a Barnes&Noble 'Discover Great New Writers pick'. It was most recently reissued by The University Of Minnesota Press. Sarah's Northern trilogy is set in the Iron Range of Minnesota. "My settings tend to be the towns in the rural north where industry (mining) and recreation (the BWCAW) compete. This small town dynamic challenges characters who are 'townies' and tourists; young and old; mining advocates and environmentalists; sometimes pitting neighbor against neighbor, and always posing a delicate balance at this 'end of the road' community where land use issues are a constant.


Awards and honors

2018: Minnesota Book Award 2018: Northeastern Minnesota Book Award 2011:
Northeastern Minnesota Book Award The Northeastern Minnesota Book Awards, or the NEMBA Awards, are awards presented annually for books that "substantially represent northeastern Minnesota in the areas of history, culture, heritage, or lifestyle." The awards, originally established ...
2004; 2013; 2018: Minnesota State Arts Board Career Development Grant. 2002: Shortlisted for Grand Prix Lectrices d’Elle for French translation of These Granite Islands 2000: Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowship 1999: Loft McKnight Fellowship for Fiction


Partial bibliography

''These Granite Islands'' (2001, Little Brown & Co. 2015, University of Minnesota Press) ''The Ice Chorus'' (2003, Little, Brown & Co.; re-released 2009, Alma Books UK) ''Shelter'' (2011, Borealis Books. 2017 University Of Minnesota Press) ''Vacationland'' (2013, University of Minnesota Press) ''Laurentian Divide'' (2018, University Of Minnesota Press) ''Fishing!'' (2020 University of Minnesota Press - originally published under pen name Ava Finch in 2015)


Reviews

Reviewing ''Vacationland'', Kirkus Reviews said: "Each chapter renders a story complete, and the stories together weave a deeply mined narrative of place and people, elegiac yet life-affirming.


References


External links


Sarah Stonich's website

Wordstalkers website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stonich, Sarah Year of birth missing (living people) Living people