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Garielle Lutz | |
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Born | Gary Lutz October 26, 1955 United States |
Language | assistant professor, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg |
Genre | short story, essays |
Garielle Lutz (born 26 October 1955) is an American writer of fiction. In 2021, simultaneous with the publication of her book Worsted, Lutz came out as a transgender woman. [1] In 2022, she was twice mentioned as an unlikely contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature. [2] [3]
Lutz was an assistant professor of English at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg, but is now retired. [4]
A collection of her short fiction, Stories in the Worst Way, was published by Alfred A. Knopf in November 1996 and re-published by 3rd Bed in 2002 and Calamari Press in 2009. Lutz's second collection of short stories, I Looked Alive, was published by the now-defunct Four Walls Eight Windows in 2003 and republished by Black Square Editions/Brooklyn Rail in 2010. Partial List of People to Bleach, a chapbook of new and early stories (published pseudonymously as Lee Stone in Gordon Lish's The Quarterly ) was released by Future Tense Books in 2007. Divorcer, a collection of seven stories, was released by Calamari Press in 2011. Her work has appeared in Sleepingfish , NOON , The Quarterly , Conjunctions, Unsaid, Fence, StoryQuarterly, The Believer , Cimarron Review, 3rd Bed, Slate Magazine, New York Tyrant, The Anchor Book of New American Short Stories, The Apocalypse Reader (Thunder's Mouth Press), PP/FF: An Anthology (Starcherone Books), The Random House Treasury of Light Verse and in the film 60 Writers/60 Places.
Lutz received a literature grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1996, and a grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts in 1999.
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Review:
Essay:
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