Yahoo India Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: Deborah Eisenberg
  2. amazon.in has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month

    Shop for Bestsellers, New-releases & More. Best Prices on Millions of Titles

Search results

  1. Deborah Eisenberg (born November 20, 1945) is an American short story writer, actress and teacher. She is a professor of writing at Columbia University. [4] Early life. Eisenberg was born in Winnetka, Illinois. Her family is Jewish. [2] . She grew up in suburban Chicago, Illinois, and moved to New York City in the late 1960s. Career.

  2. Sep 27, 2018 · Deborah Eisenberg, Chronicler of American Insanity. Over three decades of short fiction, the writer has managed to capture, with hilarious tenderness, the dysfunction of daily life in this...

    • Giles Harvey
  3. Jun 22, 2015 · Deborah Eisenberg. Born in Chicago, Eisenberg moved to New York City in the 1960's where she has lived ever since. She also teaches at the University of Virginia.

    • (12.2K)
    • November 20, 1945
  4. Sep 20, 2018 · Deborah Eisenberg, a MacArthur Fellow and a master of the short story, talks about her process, her latest book Your Duck is My Duck, and her teaching at Columbia University. Read the interview with MFA nonfiction candidate Dodie Miller-Gould and learn more about the writer's work and style.

  5. Sep 25, 2018 · In this interview, the acclaimed short story writer Deborah Eisenberg discusses her craft, influences, and latest collection Your Duck Is My Duck. She reveals her approach to fiction as a way of thinking, a way of expressing the strange and inexpressible sensations of the world.

  6. Deborah Eisenberg, The Art of Fiction No. 218. Interviewed by Catherine Steindler. Issue 204, Spring 2013. Over the past three decades, Deborah Eisenberg has produced four short-story collections: Transactions in a Foreign Currency (1986), Under the 82nd Airborne (1992), All Around Atlantis (1997), and Twilight of the Superheroes (2006).

  7. People also ask

  8. Sep 25, 2018 · In a classic Deborah Eisenberg short story, “Holy Week,” a travel writer visiting an unnamed country in Central America complacently compiles adjectives as he reviews a restaurant: “relaxed,”...