12th Street riot
1996 in film
A Garden of Earthly Delights
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
American Appetites
Atheist
Autistic
Beasts (novella)
Bellefleur
Big Mouth & Ugly Girl
Black (play)
Black Girl / White Girl
Black Water (novella)
Blonde (novel)
Bob Dylan
Boston Globe
Bram Stoker Award for Novel
By the North Gate
Catholic
Charles Dickens
Charles Schmid
Charlotte Brontë
Chicago Tribune
Chris Bohjalian
Cursive
D. H. Lawrence
Demon and other tales
Edgar Allan Poe
Emily Brontë
Entertainment Weekly
Ernest Hemingway
Everything Is Illuminated
Flannery O'Connor
Foxfire (1996 film)
Franz Kafka
Freaky Green Eyes
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Helmerich Award
Henry David Thoreau
I'll Take You There (novel)
James Joyce
Jewish
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
Jonathan Safran Foer
Joyce Carol Oates
Kenyon Review
Laura Dern
Lauren Kelly
Lewis Carroll
Lexington Herald-Leader
Little Bird of Heaven
Locus (magazine)
Los Angeles Times
Macha Rosenthal
Mademoiselle (magazine)
Main Page
Man Crazy
Marriages and Infidelities
Michael Dirda
My Heart Laid Bare
National Book Award
National Humanities Medal
New York
Nobel Prize in Literature
Norman Mailer
O. Henry Award
One-room school
Oprah's Book Club
PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction
PEN/Malamud Award
Pen names
Phi Mu
Pneumonia
Poet
Princeton University
Prix Femina
Pulitzer Prize
Pushcart Prize
Raymond J. Smith
Rea Award for the Short Story
Rosamond Smith
Sexy (novel)
Shannon Bramer
Small Avalanches and Other Stories
Smooth Talk
Sylvia Plath
Syracuse University
Texas
The Bell Jar
The Columbus Dispatch
The Falls (Oates novel)
The Gravedigger's Daughter
The Guardian
The Morning News (online magazine)
The New York Review of Books
The New York Times
The New Yorker
The Paris Review
The Rocky Mountain News
Joyce Carol Oates Oates in 2006. Photo: Sarahana Shrestha Born 16 June 1938 (1938-06-16) (age 72) Lockport, New York Occupation Novelist, short story writer, playwright, poet, literary critic, professor, editor Nationality American Period 1963–present Notable award(s) 1967 O. Henry Award 1973 O. Henry Award 1970 National Book Award Pushcart Prize 2010 National Humanities Medal Influences Charlotte Brontë, Emily Brontë, Lewis Carroll, Charles Dickens, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Franz Kafka, D. H. Lawrence, Flannery O'Connor, Edgar Allan Poe Influenced Chris Bohjalian,1 Jonathan Safran Foer, Shannon Bramer Joyce Carol Oates (born June 16, 1938) is an American author. Oates published her first book in 1963 and has since published over fifty novels, as well as many volumes of short stories, poetry, and nonfiction. Her novel them (1969) won the National Book Award, and her novels Black Water (1992), What I Lived For (1994), and Blonde (2000) were nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. As of 2008, Oates is the Roger S. Berlind '52 Professor in the Humanities with the Program in Creative Writing at Princeton University, where she has taught since 1978.2 Contents 1 Biography 1.1 Early life and education 1.2 Literary career 1.3 Teaching career 1.4 Personal life 2 Productivity 3 Select awards and honors 4 Bibliography 4.1 Novels 4.2 Short story collections 4.3 Novels as "Rosamond Smith" 4.4 Novels as "Lauren Kelly" 4.5 Novellas 4.6 Drama 4.7 Essays and Memoirs 4.8 Poetry 4.9 Young adult fiction 4.10 Children's fiction 5 References 6 External links Biography Early life and education Oates was born in Lockport, New York to Carolina Oates, a homemaker, and Frederic Oates, a tool and die designer.3 She was raised Catholic but is now an atheist.4 Oates grew up in the working-class farming community of Millersport, New York,5 and characterized hers as "a happy, close-knit and unextraordinary family for our time, place and economic status".3 Her paternal grandmother, Blanche Woodside, lived with the family and was "very close" to Joyce.5 After Blanche's death, Joyce learned that Blanche's father had killed himself and Blanche had subsequently concealed her Jewish heritage; Oates eventually drew on aspects of her grandmother's life in writing the 2007 novel The Gravedigger's Daughter.5 A brother, Fred Junior, was born in 1943, and a sister, Lynn Ann, who is severely autistic, was born in 1956.3 At the beginning of her education, Oates attended the same one-room school her mother attended as a child.3 She became interested in reading at an early age, and remembers Blanche's gift of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland as "the great treasure of my childhood, and the most profound literary influence of my life. This was love at first sight!"6 In her early teens, she devoured the writing of William Faulkner, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Henry David Thoreau, Ernest Hemingway, Charlotte Brontë, and Emily Brontë, whose "influences remain very deep".7 Oates began writing at the age of 14, when Blanche gave her a typewriter.5 Oates later transferred to several bigger, suburban schools,3 and graduated from Williamsville South High School in 1956, where she worked for her high school newspaper.citation needed She was the first in her family to complete high school.3 Oates won a scholarship to attend Syracuse University, where she joined Phi Mu.8 Oates found Syracuse "a very exciting place academically and intellectually", and trained herself by "writing novel after novel and always throwing them out when I completed them."9 It was not until this point that Oates began reading the work of D. H. Lawrence, Flannery O'Connor, Thomas Mann, and Franz Kafka, though, she noted, "these influences are still quite strong, pervasive."7 At the age of nineteen, she won the "college short story" contest sponsored by Mademoiselle. Oates graduated Syracuse as valedictorian in 1960, and received her M.A. from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1961. Evelyn Shrifte, president of the Vanguard Press, met Oates soon after she received her master's degree. "She was fresh out of school, and I thought she was a genius," Shrifte said. Oates' first book, the short-story collection By the North Gate, was published by Vanguard in 1963.10 Literary career The Vanguard Press published Oates' first novel, With Shuddering Fall (1964), when she was 26 years old. In 1966, she published "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?", a short story dedicated to Bob Dylan and written after listening to his song "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue."11 The story is loosely based on the serial killer Charles Schmid, also known as "The Pied Piper of Tucson".12 The story was frequently anthologized and was adapted into the 1985 film Smooth Talk, starring Laura Dern. In 2008, Oates said that of all her published work, she is most noted for "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?".13 Another noted early short story, "In a Region of Ice" (1967), dramatizes the drift into protest against the world of education and sober, established society of his parents, depression and eventual murder-cum-suicide act of a young, gifted Jewish-American student. Like a number of other novels and short stories in her body of work, this was inspired by a real-life incident, and Oates had been acquainted with the model of her protagonist. She revisited this subject in the title story of her collection Last Days (1985). Oates's novel them (1969) received the National Book Award in 1970; it is set in Detroit during a time span from the 1930s to the 1960s, most of it in black ghetto neighborhoods, and deals openly with crime, drugs, and racial/class conflicts. Again, some of the key characters and events were based on real people whom Oates had known or heard of during her years in the city. Since then she has published an average of two books a year. Frequent topics in her work include rural poverty, sexual abuse, class tensions, desire for power, female childhood and adolescence, and occasionally the supernatural. Violence is a constant in her work, even leading Oates to have written an essay in response to the question, "Why Is Your Writing So Violent?" She is a fan of poet and novelist Sylvia Plath, describing Plath's sole novel The Bell Jar as a "near perfect work of art"; but though Oates has often been compared to Plath, she disavows Plath's romanticism about suicide and among her characters, she favors cunning, hardy survivors, both women and men.citation needed Oates' concern with violence and other traditionally masculine topics has won her the respect of such male authors as Norman Mailer. In the early 1980s, Oates began writing stories in the Gothic and horror genres; in her foray into these genres, Oates said she was "deeply influenced" by Kafka and felt "a writerly kinship" with James Joyce.14 In 1996, Oates published We Were the Mulvaneys, a novel following the disintegration of an American family, which became a best-seller after being selected by Oprah's Book Club in 2001.13 In the 1990s and early 2000s, Oates wrote several books, mostly mystery novels, under the pen names "Rosamond Smith" and "Lauren Kelly." For more than twenty-five years, Oates has been rumored to be a "favorite" to win the Nobel Prize in Literature by oddsmakers and critics.15 Her papers, held at Syracuse University, include seventeen unpublished short stories and four unpublished or unfinished novellas. Oates has said that most of her early unpublished work was "cheerfully thrown away."16 Oates' work has been characterized as "melodrama"17 and, as an author, "very far from being a great writer." Teaching career Oates taught in Beaumont, Texas, for a year before moving to Detroit in 1962, where she began teaching at the University of Detroit. Influenced by the Vietnam war, the 1967 Detroit race riots, and a job offer, in 1968 Oates moved with her husband to teaching positions at the University of Windsor, Canada.3 In 1978, she moved to Princeton and began teaching at Princeton University. In 1995, Princeton undergraduate Jonathan Safran Foer took an introductory writing course with Oates,18 who took an interest in Foer's writing, telling him that he had "that most important of writerly qualities, energy".19 Foer later recalled that "she was the first person to ever make me think I should try to write in any sort of serious way. And my life really changed after that."19 Oates served as the advisor to Foer's senior thesis, an early version of his novel Everything Is Illuminated, which was published to wide acclaim in 1999.18 Personal life While studying at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Oates met Raymond J. Smith, a fellow graduate student, whom she married in 1961.5 Smith became a professor of 18th-century literature, and later an editor and publisher. Together the couple founded The Ontario Review, a literary magazine, in 1974, on which Oates served as associate editor.20 In 1980, Oates and Smith founded Ontario Review Books, an independent publishing house. In 2004, Oates described the partnership as "a marriage of like minds—both my husband and I are so interested in literature and we read the same books; he'll be reading a book and then I'll read it—we trade and we talk about our reading at meal times[...]it's a very collaborative and imaginative marriage".3 Smith died of complications from pneumonia on February 18, 2008.20 In April 2008, Oates wrote to an interviewer, "Since my husband's unexpected death, I really have very little energy[...]My marriage—my love for my husband—seems to have come first in my life, rather than my writing. Set beside his death, the future of my writing scarcely interests me at the moment."21 In early 2009 Oates married Professor Charles Gross, of the Psychology Department and Neuroscience Institute at Princeton.22 who had been married twice previously. 23 Oates met Gross at a dinner party at her home six months after Smith's death. 24 Oates is devoted to running, and has written that, "[i]deally, the runner who's a writer is running through the land- and cityscapes of her fiction, like a ghost in a real setting."25 While running, Oates mentally envisions scenes in her novels and works out structural problems in already-written drafts; she formulated the germ of her novel You Must Remember This (1987) while running, when she "glanced up and saw the ruins of a railroad bridge", which reminded her of "a mythical upstate New York city in the right place".25 In 1973, Oates began keeping a detailed journal documenting her personal and literary life; it eventually grew to "more than 4,000 single-spaced typewritten pages".26 In 2008, Oates said she had "moved away from keeping a formal journal" and instead preserves copies of her e-mails.21 Oates is a member of the Board of Trustees of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Productivity Oates writes in longhand,27 working from "8 till 1 every day, then again for two or three hours in the evening."15 Her prolificacy has become one of her best-known attributes; The New York Times wrote in 1989 that Oates's "name is synonymous with productivity",28 and in 2004, The Guardian noted that "Nearly every review of an Oates book, it seems, begins with a list [of the number of books she has published]".3 In a journal entry written in the 1970s, Oates sarcastically addressed her critics, writing, "So many books! so many! Obviously JCO has a full career behind her, if one chooses to look at it that way; many more titles and she might as well... what?...give up all hopes for a 'reputation'?[...]but I work hard, and long, and as the hours roll by I seem to create more than I anticipate; more, certainly, than the literary world allows for a 'serious' writer. Yet I have more stories to tell, and more novels[...]".29 In The New York Review of Books in 2007, Michael Dirda suggested that disparaging criticism of Oates "derives from reviewer's angst: How does one judge a new book by Oates when one is not familiar with most of the backlist? Where does one start?"15 Several publications have published lists of what they deem the best Joyce Carol Oates books, designed to help introduce readers to the author's daunting oeuvre. In a 2003 article titled "Joyce Carol Oates for dummies", The Rocky Mountain News recommended starting with her early short stories and the novels A Garden of Earthly Delights (1967), them (1969), Wonderland (1971), Black Water (1992), and Blonde (2000).30 In 2006, The Times listed them, On Boxing (1987), Black Water, and High Lonesome: New & Selected Stories, 1966-2006 (2006) as "The Pick of Joyce Carol Oates".31 In 2007, Entertainment Weekly listed their Oates "favorites" as Wonderland, Black Water, Blonde, I'll Take You There (2002), and The Falls (2004).32 In 2003, Oates herself said that she thinks she will be remembered for, and would most want a first-time Oates reader to read, them and Blonde, though she added that "I could as easily have chosen a number of titles."33 For reference to her personal life and recent book "A Widow's Story: A Memoir" see the PBS/News Hour show originally broadcast on February 3, 2011. Select awards and honors Winner: 1968: M. L. Rosenthal Award, National Institute of Arts and Letters - A Garden of Earthly Delights 1970: National Book Award - them 1973: O. Henry Award - "The Dead" 1990: Rea Award for the Short Story 1996: Bram Stoker Award for Novel - Zombie 1996: PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Art of the Short Story 2002: Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award34 2003: Kenyon Review Award for Literary Achievement 2005: Prix Femina Etranger - The Falls 2006: Chicago Tribune Literary Prize35 2010: National Humanities Medal36 2011: Honorary Doctor of Arts, the University of Pennsylvania 37 Nominated: 1968: National Book Award - A Garden of Earthly Delights 38 1969: National Book Award - Expensive People 39 1972: National Book Award - Wonderland 40 1990: National Book Award - Because It Is Bitter, and Because It Is My Heart 41 1992: National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction - Black Water42 1993: Pulitzer Prize - Black Water43 1995: PEN/Faulkner Award - What I Lived For44 Bibliography Novels With Shuddering Fall (1964) A Garden of Earthly Delights (1967) Expensive People (1968) them (1969) Wonderland (1971) Do with Me What You Will (1973) The Assassins: A Book of Hours (1975) Childwold (1976) Son of the Morning (1978) Cybele (1979) Unholy Loves (1979) Bellefleur (1980) Angel of Light (1981) A Bloodsmoor Romance (1982) Mysteries of Winterthurn (1984) Solstice (1985) Marya: A Life (1986) You Must Remember This (1987) American Appetites (1989) Because It Is Bitter, and Because It Is My Heart (1990) Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang (1993) (the basis for the 1996 film Foxfire) What I Lived For (1994) Zombie (1995) We Were the Mulvaneys (1996) Man Crazy (1997) My Heart Laid Bare (1998) Broke Heart Blues (1999) Blonde (2000) Middle Age: A Romance (2001) I'll Take You There (2002) The Tattooed Girl (2003) The Falls (2004) Missing Mom (2005) Black Girl / White Girl (2006) The Gravedigger's Daughter (2007) My Sister, My Love (2008) Little Bird of Heaven (2009) A Fair Maiden (2010) The Crosswicks Horror (Forthcoming) Short story collections By the North Gate (1963) Upon the Sweeping Flood And Other Stories (1966) The Wheel of Love and Other Stories (1970) "How I Contemplated the World from the Detroit House of Correction" "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" Marriages and Infidelities (1972) The Goddess and Other Women (1974) The Hungry Ghosts: Seven Allusive Comedies (1974) Night-Sides (1977) Demon and other tales (1996) Will You Always Love Me? And Other Stories (1996) The Collector of Hearts: New Tales of the Grotesque (1998) Faithless: Tales of Transgression (2001) I Am No One You Know: Stories (2004) The Female of the Species: Tales of Mystery and Suspense (2006) High Lonesome: New & Selected Stories, 1966-2006 (2006) The Museum of Dr. Moses: Tales of Mystery and Suspense (2007) "The Temple" (1996) Wild Nights! (2008) Life After High School Dear Husband (2009) Sourland: Stories (2010) Give Me Your Heart: Tales of Mystery and Suspense (2011) Novels as "Rosamond Smith" Lives of the Twins (1987) (U.K. title: Kindred Passions) Soul/Mate (1989) Nemesis (1990) Snake Eyes (1992) You Can't Catch Me (1995) Double Delight (1997) Starr Bright Will Be With you Soon (1999) The Barrens (2001) Novels as "Lauren Kelly" Take Me, Take Me With You (2003) The Stolen Heart (2005) Blood Mask (2006) Novellas The Triumph of the Spider Monkey (1976) I Lock My Door Upon Myself (1990) The Rise of Life on Earth (1991) Black Water (1992) First Love: A Gothic Tale (1996) Beasts (2002) Rape: A Love Story (2003) The Corn Maiden: A Love Story (2005) Drama Miracle Play (1974) Three Plays (1980) In Darkest America (1991) I Stand Before You Naked (1991) Twelve Plays (1991) (including Black) The Perfectionist and Other Plays (1995) New Plays (1998) Dr. Magic: Six One Act Plays (2004) Essays and Memoirs The Edge of Impossibility: Tragic Forms in Literature (1972) The Hostile Sun: The Poetry of D.H. Lawrence (1974) New Heaven, New Earth: The Visionary Experience in Literature (1974) The Picture of Dorian Gray: Wilde’s Parable of the Fall (1980) Contraries: Essays (1981) The Profane Art: Essays & Reviews (1983) On Boxing (1987) (Woman) Writer: Occasions and Opportunities (1988) George Bellows: American Artist (1995) They Just Went Away 1995 Where I've Been, And Where I'm Going: Essays, Reviews, and Prose (1999) The Faith of A Writer: Life, Craft, Art (2003) Uncensored: Views & (Re)views (2005) In Rough Country (2010) A Widow's Story: A Memoir (2011) Poetry Women In Love and Other Poems (1968) Anonymous Sins & Other Poems (1969) Love and Its Derangements (1970) Angel Fire (1973) The Fabulous Beasts (1975) Women Whose Lives Are Food, Men Whose Lives Are Money (1978) Invisible Woman: New and Selected Poems, 1970-1982 (1982) The Time Traveler (1989) Tenderness (1996) The Coming Storm (Forthcoming) Young adult fiction Big Mouth & Ugly Girl (2002) Small Avalanches and Other Stories (2003) Freaky Green Eyes (2003) Sexy (2005) After the Wreck, I Picked Myself Up, Spread My Wings, and Flew Away (2006) Children's fiction Come Meet Muffin! (1998) Where Is Little Reynard? (2003) Naughty Chérie! (2008) References ^ "What Authors Influenced You?", Authorsontheweb.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-10. ^ The Program in Creative Writing, Princeton University ^ a b c d e f g h i Edemariam, Aida. "The new Monroe doctrine", The Guardian, 2004-09-04. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ Oates, Joyce Carol. "Humanism and Its Discontents", The Humanist, November–December 2007. ^ a b c d e Reese, Jennifer. "Joyce Carol Oates gets personal", Entertainment Weekly, 2007-07-13. ^ Oates (2003.) The Faith of a Writer. p. 14. ^ a b Milazzo, Lee, ed. Conversations with Joyce Carol Oates. University Press of Mississippi, 1989. 143. ^ Oates, Joyce Carol. "Lowest Ebb: Bound", The New Yorker, 2002-04-22. Retrieved on 2008-10-30. ^ Phillips, Robert. "The Art of Fiction No. 72: Joyce Carol Oates" (interview), The Paris Review 74, Fall-Winter 1978. ^ Woo, Elaine, "Obituaries: Evelyn Shrifte, Longtime Head of Vanguard Press"; Los Angeles Times, September 8, 1999 ^ "Dedication Of Joyce Carol Oates Short Story To Dylan". http://www.edlis.org/twice/threads/joyce_carol_oates_dedication.html.  ^ "Charles Schmid, The Pied Piper of Tucson". CourtTV Crime Library. http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/predators/schmid/oates_9.html.  ^ a b Truman, Cheryl. "Author Joyce Carol Oates is always at her finest" (reprint), Lexington Herald-Leader, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ HorrorOnline Author Focus: Joyce Carol Oates 1999 ^ a b c Dirda, Michael. ""The Wand of the Enchanter", The New York Review of Books 54.20, 2007-12-20. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ "The Madness of Scholarship". Kennesaw: The Magazine of Kennesaw State College. 1993. http://jco.usfca.edu/madness.html.  ^ Featured Author: Joyce Carol Oates With Reviews and Articles From the Archives of The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/07/05/specials/oates.html ^ a b Nash, Margo. "Learning to Write From the Masters", The New York Times, 2002-12-01. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ a b Birnbaum, Robert. "Jonathan Safran Foer: Author of Everything is Illuminated talks with Robert Birnbaum", IdentityTheory.com, 2006-05-26. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ a b "Raymond Smith, 77, Founder and Editor of Literary Journal", The New York Times, 2008-02-27. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ a b Smalldon, Jeffrey. In the December 13, 2010 issue of New Yorker magazine Oates published "A Widow's Story" describing, in touching detail, her last days with, and the death of Smith. "End of story?: Joyce Carol Oates takes stock as she approaches 70", The Columbus Dispatch, 2008-04-06. Retrieved on 2008-10-30. ^ http://crossingtheborder.wordpress.com/2009/05/04/married/ ^ Gross, Charles G.,History of Neuroscience in Autobiography, Vol 6,Society for Neuroscience, 2008 ^ http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201104061000 "Joyce Carol Oates Forum with Michael Krasny ^ a b Oates, Joyce Carol. "Writers on Writing: To Invigorate Literary Mind, Start Moving Literary Feet", The New York Times, 1999-07-18. Retrieved on 2008-10-30. ^ Campbell, James. "The Oates Diaries", The New York Times, 2007-10-07. Retrieved on 2008-10-30. ^ Birnbaum, Robert. "Personalities: Birnbaum v. Joyce Carol Oates", The Morning News, 2005-02-03. Retrieved on 2008-10-30. ^ "The more they write, the more they write", The New York Times, 1989-07-30. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ Johnson, Greg, ed. The Journal of Joyce Carol Oates: 1973-1982. New York: Ecco, 2007. 331. ^ Davis, Duane. "Joyce Carol Oates for dummies", "Where to start", "Onto the novels" (series of articles), The Rocky Mountain News, 2003-06-13. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ Freeman, John. "Joyce Carol Oates, up close and personal", The Times, 2007-08-11. Retrieved on 2008-10-28. ^ "Book News: Daily Oates Consumption", Entertainment Weekly, 2007-07-06. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ "Off the Page: Joyce Carol Oates", The Washington Post, 2003-10-24. Retrieved on 2008-10-29. ^ "People and Publishing: Awards," Locus, January 2003, p.8. ^ http://www.chfestival.org/fest2006/index.cfm?fa=home.program&id=1236&sec=adult ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/03/01/AR2011030106522.html ^ http://www.UPENN.EDU ^ The National Book Foundation ^ The National Book Foundation ^ Joyce Carol Oates - Wonderland ^ The National Book Foundation ^ The National Book Critics Circle ^ http://jco.usfca.edu/awards.html ^ Folger Shakespeare Library External links This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. Please improve this article by removing excessive and inappropriate external links. (September 2009) Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Joyce Carol Oates Websites Celestial Timepiece: The Joyce Carol Oates Home Page – Joyce Carol Oates's official web site. Papers Papers of Joyce Carol Oates at Syracuse University Biographies: Heath Anthology of American Literature Biography Bartleby biography Interviews and Speeches: Joyce Carol Oates to graduates: we do love our students- Boston Globe PBS Interview Interview with the Oxonian Review in June 2010 Miscellaneous: Works by or about Joyce Carol Oates in libraries (WorldCat catalog) v · d · eNovels by Joyce Carol Oates The Wonderland Quartet A Garden of Earthly Delights (1967)  • Expensive People (1968)  • them (1969)  • Wonderland (1971) The Gothic Saga Bellefleur (1980)  • A Bloodsmoor Romance (1982)  • Mysteries of Winterthurn (1984)  • My Heart Laid Bare (1998)  • The Crosswicks Horror (Forthcoming) Other novels With Shuddering Fall (1964)  • Do with Me What You Will (1973)  • The Assassins: A Book of Hours (1975)  • Childwold (1976)  • Son of the Morning (1978)  • Cybele (1979)  • Unholy Loves (1979)  • Angel of Light (1981)  • Solstice (1985)  • Marya: A Life (1986)  • You Must Remember This (1987)  • American Appetites (1989)  • Because It Is Bitter, and Because It Is My Heart (1990)  • Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang (1993)  • What I Lived For (1994)  • Zombie (1995)  • We Were the Mulvaneys (1996)  • Man Crazy (1997)  • Broke Heart Blues (1999)  • Blonde (2000)  • Middle Age: A Romance (2001)  • I'll Take You There (2002)  • The Tattooed Girl (2003)  • The Falls (2004)  • Missing Mom (2005)  • Black Girl / White Girl (2006)  • The Gravedigger's Daughter (2007)  • My Sister, My Love (2008)  • Little Bird of Heaven (2009)  • A Fair Maiden (2010) As "Rosamond Smith" Lives of the Twins (1987)  • Soul/Mate (1989)  • Nemesis (1990)  • Snake Eyes (1992)  • You Can't Catch Me (1995)  • Double Delight (1997)  • Starr Bright Will Be With you Soon (1999)  • The Barrens (2001) As "Lauren Kelly" Take Me, Take Me With You (2003)  • The Stolen Heart (2005)  • Blood Mask (2006) Novellas The Triumph of the Spider Monkey (1976)  • I Lock My Door Upon Myself (1990)  • The Rise of Life on Earth (1991)  • Black Water (1992)  • First Love: A Gothic Tale (1996)  • Beasts (2001)  • Rape: A Love Story (2003)  • The Corn Maiden: A Love Story (2005) Young adult fiction Big Mouth & Ugly Girl (2002)  • Small Avalanches and Other Stories (2003)  • Freaky Green Eyes (2003)  • Sexy (2005)  • After the Wreck, I Picked Myself Up, Spread My Wings, and Flew Away (2006) Persondata Name Oates, Joyce Carol Alternative names Short description Date of birth 1938-06-16 Place of birth Lockport, New York Date of death Place of death


Should Joyce Carol Oates have revealed her second marriage?

After all the conversation these last few years about the ethics of the memoir, you'd think we might have figured it out.


http://www.elessidil.com/color_oates.html

Celestial Timepiece: A Joyce Carol Oates Home Page

"Is it perverse to suggest that Joyce Carol Oates's memoir of widowhood is as enthralling as it is painful? Oates has always focused her writing ...



Joyce Carol Oates' grief

In a writing career that includes 50 novels and dozens of nonfiction books written over some 48 years, a topic that Joyce Carol Oates often returns to is 1960s Detroit, with its leafy neighborhoods and smoldering racial politics. That includes her latest book, "A Widow's Tale" (Ecco/Harper Collins), a memoir that recounts the grueling months after her husband's sudden death.

Oates Joyce Carol
http://www.bethmshields.com/Authors.htm

Joyce Carol Oates: Biography from Answers.com

Joyce Carol Oates is a prolific writer of fiction and non-fiction who is known best for her novels Them (1969) and We Were the Mulvaneys (1996) ...



Joyce Carol Oates defends 'breach of narrative promise'

Author justifies failure, criticised by Julian Barnes, to mention remarriage in her memoir A Widow's Story Joyce Carol Oates has defended herself against Julian Barnes's accusation that her failure to mention her remarriage a year after her husband's death in her memoir of widowhood will cause some readers to feel "they have a good case for breach of narrative promise". A review by Barnes of ...

And no one knows if and how it will ever end Joyce Carol Oates writing career that is Courtesy of Princeton UniversityJoyce Carol Oates The celebrated creator of novels short stories essays plays and children s books delighted a Syracuse audience Tuesday evening as she
http://blog.syracuse.com/shelflife/2007/07/another_oates_novel_yep.html

Joyce Carol Oates

A Reader's Guide to the Recent Novels of Joyce Carol Oates ... Joyce Carol Oates has often expressed an intense nostalgia for the time and place of her childhood, and her ...



Joyce Carol Oates vs. Critics Over Bereavement and Remarriage

Players: Joyce Carol Oates; Julian Barnes, New York Review of Books ; Janet Maslin, New York Times Book Review. Opening Serve: Joyce Carol Oates' memoir about the death of her husband, Raymond J. Smith, has received a fair amount of criticism since it came out in February. After its release, New York Times  book reviewer Janet Maslin knocked Oates for omitting the fact that she was engaged less ...

The Natal Chart is made up of all the Planets the Sun the Moon the Rising Sign and the Midheaven The placements of these components are recorded on the Wheel of 12 Houses The Rising Sign
http://www.astrolreport.com/famous/j.c.oates.htm

Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938) - pseudonyms: Lauren Kelly, Rosamond Smith ... Joyce Carol Oates was born in 1938 in Millersport, N.Y, into a bluecollar Catholic family. ...



Should Joyce Carol Oates have revealed her second marriage?

From the Department of Tempest in a Teapot: In the current issue of the New York Review of Books, Joyce Carol Oates responds, in a letter, to Julian Barnes' April 7 review of her memoir "A Widow's Story."

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Joyce Carol Oates Books (Used, New, Out-of-Print) - Alibris

Alibris has new & used books by Joyce Carol Oates, including hardcovers, softcovers, rare, out-of-print first editions, signed copies, and more.



Oates opens up about writing, death

As part of her tenure as the 2011 Kestenbaum Writer-in-Residence, author Joyce Carol Oates spoke to a crowd in I-House Wednesday on her husband's death and the changes in her writing process.

If you are a writer you locate yourself behind a wall of silence and no matter what you are doing driving a car or walking or doing housework you can still be writing because you have that
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Joyce Carol Oates Papers An inventory of her papers at ...

Joyce Carol Oates Papers. Inclusive Dates: 1956-2006. Quantity: 69 linear ft. Abstract: ... On the death of Joyce Carol Oates, access to these writings will be open to ...



Joyce Carol Oates: The short fiction of Margaret Drabble.

A woman who has spent the morning having a broken tooth replaced finds herself in a part of London where she used to meet a lover for surreptitious lunches during the course of a “long and lovely year.” She returns to their restaurant—telling herself that it . . . (Subscription required.)

An interview with author Joyce Carol Oates Famously prolific author Joyce Carol Oates who has been nominated three times for a Pulitzer Prize will be reading an excerpt from one of her books and discussing her life as a writer with
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Joyce Carol Oates .net - Biography, Pictures, Videos, & Quotes

Joyce Carol Oates, a famous American writer was born on June 16th, 1938. She is daughter of Carolina Oates, a housewife and Frederic Oates, a manufacturing worker. ...



Book 'Em: Joyce Carol Oates, Others Write "LA Noire" Video Game Fan Fiction

In a pretty unexpected bit of marketing, Rockstar Games is teaming up with Little, Brown and Company imprint Mulholland Books for a short story e-collection inspired by the video game "LA Noire." Hey, it's nice that a video game publisher...

Joyce Carol Oates and Aldon James
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Joyce Carol Oates | LibraryThing

Works by Joyce Carol Oates: We Were The Mulvaneys, The Falls, Blonde: A Novel, The Gravedigger's Daughter, Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang, Black ...



Crime fiction collection inspired by video game

A new crime fiction anthology is a story of guns and games.

Joyce Carol Oates accepts her award
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Amazon.com: Oates, Joyce Carol - ( O ): Books

Books " Literature & Fiction " Authors, A-Z " ( O ) " Oates, Joyce Carol ... Black Girl/White Girl - A Novel by Joyce Carol Oates (Paperback - 2006) - Import ...



'A Widow's Story'

Joyce Carol Oates Julian Barnes’s thoughtful review of my memoir A Widow’s Story [ NYR , April 7], buttressed with quotations from Samuel Johnson and C.S. Lewis, culminates in an accusation that in having not clearly stated that I was remarried thirteen months after the death of my husband Raymond Smith, I am open to charges that “some readers will feel they have a good case for breach of ...

Joyce Carol Oates 2002
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