Sabine Heinlein (born 1973) is a German American nonfiction writer and quilter. She is the author of the literary nonfiction book Among Murderers: Life After Prison (University of California Press, 2013) and the investigative book The Orphan Zoo: The Rise and Fall of the Farm at Creedmoor Psychiatric Center (Thought Catalog, 2015 and 2023). Heinlein’s essays, investigative work, and literary nonfiction have appeared in The Guardian, The New York Times, The Paris Review, Psychology Today, The Iowa Review, and many other publications. Her work has been widely anthologized. She is currently a senior staff writer at Wirecutter, the product recommendation site of the New York Times. [1]
Heinlein grew up in Baiersdorf, [2] a small village close to Nuremberg in northern Bavaria. She moved to Hamburg, Germany after high school. [3] There, she earned a master’s degree in art history from Universität Hamburg. [4] After graduation she immigrated to New York City, where she earned a master’s in journalism from New York University. [5] She resides in Queens, NY with her husband. [6]
Heinlein’s journalism tackles a wide variety of issues, including homelessness, [7] family dynamics, [8] the death penalty, murder, and incarceration, [9] mental illness, [10] drug addiction, suicide, and the Jewish history of her home town. [11] In her essays, which are part humorous and part gloomy, she reflects on her friendship with prisoners, [12] her love for rabbits, [13] her fear of clowns, [14] her decision to stay childless, [15] and her encounters with Oliver Sacks, [16] among other things.
Heinlein is the author of Among Murderers: Life After Prison (University of California Press, 2013). [17] The book follows three convicted murderers who spent decades in prison as they try to reintegrate into society over the course of two years. On the book’s inside flap, David Samuels described Heinlein and her work as follows: "With this unsentimental yet deeply empathetic look at the lives of ex-cons struggling to make it on the outside, Sabine Heinlein establishes herself as the Orwell of rehabilitation, American-style." Kirkus Review called the book “A deeply compassionate book that poses urgent questions about the end product of imprisonment and the social thirst for vengeance.” [18] The Times Higher Education stated "This book is more than a tribute to the men interviewed: it asks us to test ourselves on our capacity for forgiveness and then to consider penal power’s capacity to destroy the self." [19]
For her book The Orphan Zoo: The Rise and Fall of the Farm at Creedmoor Psychiatric Center (Thought Catalog, 2015) [20] Heinlein spent a year shadowing a group of inpatients and their therapist. The Orphan Zoo recounts the group’s fruitless attempts to save the “Farm,” a dysfunctional rehabilitation program at the notorious Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, while struggling with paranoia and hoarding. [21] [22]
Heinlein’s book Among Murderers: Life After Prison received a gold medal from the Independent Publishers Award. [23] Her work has been supported by numerous residency programs and fellowships, including the New York Foundation for the Arts, [24] Yaddo, [25] MacDowell, [26] the Hambidge residency, The King & Spalding Distinguished Fellowship, [27] and the Blue Mountain Center. Heinlein has also received a Richard J. Margolis Award for social justice reporting [28] and a Pushcart Prize. [29]
Heinlein is also a quilter. [34] Her quilts mostly feature frolicking animals who often retaliate against humans. [35] In 2020 and 2021, she created a pandemic quilt series, which includes a Zoonotic Disease Quilt, [36] a quilted 10 Plagues book, [37] and an Egyptian Coffin quilt. [38]
Roslyn Bernstein writes in Guernica, “Journalistic writing required Heinlein to be precise, but, inspired by Gee’s Bend quilters in rural Alabama, and by Harriet Powers, a Black quilter from the late 19th century, Heinlein feels the freedom to be imperfect when stitching her quilts.” [39] Heinlein’s textile art, which is made from recycled textiles, has been exhibited nationally, including at the Annmarie Sculpture Garden & Art Center, [40] at Field Projects, [41] and at Pollack Gallery at Monmouth University. [42]
Virginia Doris Heinlein was an American chemist, biochemist, engineer, and the third wife and muse of Robert A. Heinlein, a prominent and successful author often considered one of the "Big Three" of science fiction.
Creedmoor Psychiatric Center is a psychiatric hospital at 79-26 Winchester Boulevard in Queens Village, Queens, New York, United States. It provides inpatient, outpatient and residential services for severely mentally ill patients. The hospital occupies more than 300 acres (121 ha) and includes more than 50 buildings.
Is There No Place On Earth For Me? is a nonfiction book written by Susan Sheehan and published in 1982 by Houghton Mifflin. It won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction. This book recounts the lonely, harrowing life of Sylvia Frumkin who is diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Deb Olin Unferth is an American short story writer, novelist, and memoirist. She is the author of the collection of stories Minor Robberies, the novel Vacation, both published by McSweeney's, and the memoir, Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the War, published by Henry Holt. Unferth was a finalist for a 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award for her memoir, Revolution.
Coffee Creek Correctional Facility is a women's prison and prisoner intake center in Wilsonville, Oregon, United States. Operated by the Oregon Department of Corrections, the 1,684-bed facility opened in 2001 at a 108-acre (0.44 km2) campus. The selection of the location for the prison was controversial and included legal challenges. The minimum and medium security facility operates several programs designed to teach skills to inmates. Coffee Creek is the only women's prison in Oregon.
Alison Hawthorne Deming is an American poet, essayist and teacher, former Agnese Nelms Haury Chair in Environment and Social Justice and currently Regents Professor Emerita in Creative Writing at the University of Arizona. She received a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship.
Mikita Brottman, née Mikita Hoy, is a British American non-fiction author, scholar, and psychologist known for her interest in true crime. Her writing blends a number of genres, often incorporating elements of autobiography, psychoanalysis, forensic psychology, and literary history.
Ellen Bass is an American poet and author. She has won three Pushcart Prizes and a Lambda Literary Award for her 2002 book Mules of Love. She co-authored the 1991 child sexual abuse book The Courage to Heal. She received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2014 and was elected a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets in 2017. Bass has taught poetry at Pacific University and founded poetry programs for prison inmates.
Nancy K. Pearson is an American poet. She is the author of The Whole by Contemplation of a Single Bone and Two Minutes of Light.
Sy Montgomery is an American naturalist, author and scriptwriter who writes for children as well as adults.
Sheila Bunker Nickerson is an American poet and writer. She served as poet laureate of Alaska and was twice awarded the Pushcart Prize. Much of her writing focuses on Alaska, nature, and arctic exploration.
Laraine Herring is an American writer of both novels and nonfiction books. Laraine's poetry, fiction, and essays have appeared in various anthologies and magazines, including Midnight Mind and Walking the Twilight: Women Writers of the Southwest. She was awarded the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund grant for her fiction, and her non-fiction has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.
Darcy S. Pattison is an American writer of fiction and nonfiction children’s literature, a blogger, writing teacher, and indie publisher. Her books have been translated into nine languages. Although she is best known for her work in children’s literature, she is also a writing teacher traveling across the nation presenting her Novel Revision Retreat. She has been featured as a writer and writing teacher in prestigious publications such as Writing Young Adult Fiction For Dummies, and 2012 Writer's Market. Pattison is also an independent publisher of ebooks for adults in the educational market.
Alice Mattison is an American novelist and short story writer.
Sarah Einstein is an American essayist and writer of memoir and literary nonfiction. She is a recipient of the Association of Writers & Writing Programs Award for Creative Nonfiction, and the Pushcart Prize.
Leigh Newman is an American writer. Her story collection about Alaskan women Nobody Gets Out Alive was long-listed for the National Book Award and the Story Prize. Her memoir, Still Points North, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle's John Leonard First Book Prize.
Jennifer Percy is an American writer. Her work has been published in The New York Times, Harper's, and The New Republic.
Amy Butcher is an American writer and essayist. Her memoir, Mothertrucker, was published from Amazon Publishing literary press Little A Books in 2022. Her first book, Visiting Hours: A Memoir of Friendship and Murder, was published in 2015. In August 2019, Makeready Films announced a film adaptation of Mothertrucker will be produced and directed by Jill Soloway and will star Julianne Moore. In February 2020, the Ohio State Arts Council awarded excerpts of Mothertrucker an Individual Excellence Award.
Jaquira Díaz is a Puerto Rican fiction writer, essayist, journalist, cultural critic, and professor. She is the author of Ordinary Girls, which received a Whiting Award in Nonfiction, a Florida Book Awards Gold Medal, was a Lambda Literary Award Finalist, and a Barnes & Noble Discover Prize Finalist. She has written for The Atlantic, Time (magazine), The Best American Essays, Tin House, The Sun, The Fader, Rolling Stone, The Guardian, Longreads, and other places. She was an editor at theKenyon Reviewand a visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.In 2022, she held the Mina Hohenberg Darden Chair in Creative Writing at Old Dominion University's MFA program and a Pabst Endowed Chair for Master Writers at the Atlantic Center for the Arts. She has taught creative writing at Colorado State University's MFA program, Randolph College's low-residency MFA program, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Kenyon College. Díaz lives in New York with her spouse, British writer Lars Horn, and is an Assistant Professor of Writing at Columbia University.
CHAOS: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties is a 2019 nonfiction book written by Tom O'Neill with Dan Piepenbring. The book presents O'Neill's research into the background and motives for the Tate–LaBianca murders committed by the Manson Family in 1969. O'Neill questions the Helter Skelter scenario argued by lead prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi in the trials and in his book Helter Skelter (1974). The book's title is a reference to the covert CIA program Operation CHAOS.
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