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New York Review of Books Author Yale Brom

Books

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New York Times Editor's Option, New England Books Award Finalist, Indie Notable Book

"An irresistible read in part because its protagonist, Frankie Ross, seduces u.s. on the commencement folio and never surrenders our affection, but likewise because fictional Rock Harbor feels as real as she does."

Richard Russo, author of That One-time Cape Magic and Empire Falls

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Motion-picture show Accommodation by Rebecca Chace and Lisanne Skyler received the Tony Cox Beginning Laurels for best screenplay (Short Movie) at the Nantucket Film Festival in 2010.

"First novels virtually growing up in the seventies can exist relied upon to chart a trail of fumbling sex, catholic drug appetites, and wake-up call pregnancies leading, inevitably, to a loss of innocence; Chace, however, has committed a refreshing apostasy by suggesting that innocence can be extravagantly hard to kill off"

The New Yorker

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"June Sparrow and the 1000000 Dollar Penny is an accessible, classic tale that has enough to say about how we detect family, and how nosotros discover home. Readers of all ages will beloved this volume."

2-time National Book Laurels finalist Eliot Schrefer

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New York Times Editor's Choice and Selection of Summer

"Ms. Chace describes the fear, the thrill, the catharsis of a fine performance, without cocky-aggrandizement or the use of cheap tricks.  She achieves this through deceptively simple description, in the voice of a professional.  Here, for example, she looks back on her showtime functioning:  "I rushed some of the moments, not allowing the audience plenty time to applaud.  Yous accept to stop very clearly in the circus and admit them in order to give them permission to admit yous.  Later, I learned to lengthen and savor these moments."

New York Times Book Review

Recent Work

Selected Essays

The Leopard, by Giuseppe di Lampedusa, a reflection on the classic novel on Bookpost USA

The Vixen, by Francine Prose, my review of the novel on BookPostUSA

And Finally I'll Say Goodbye remembering my female parent, Jean Valentine, for the Yale Review

2 Coats of Painti nterview with artist Julie Heffernan.

The City We Became A review of the novel by N.1000. Jemisin for Book Mail

#Campus Clear A short essay on education in the time of Covid from Scoundrel Time Magazine

Writing the Virus: an anthology of writings in the time of Covid from StatORec Magazine

An interview with editors of StatORec Magazine in the Brooklyn Rails

"The View from My Bed" A meditative essay on life in the fourth dimension of Covid for Scoundrel Time magazine

"Mask and Gloves" a consideration of the present moment, Spring 2020, for StatORec

Reflections on Wyoming and Gretel Ehrlich for Bookpost Usa

The legendary downtown performer, Edgar Oliver, for The Los Angeles Review of Books

"Looking for Katalin Street" on Magda Szabo's novel for Guernica Magazine

"Regarding the Hurting of Trump" On Susan Sontag and Donald TrumpThe Los Angeles Review of Books

"Why 3 Generations of My Family unit Are Marching in Washington," inLitHub

"Looking for Robinson Crusoe," memoir,The Literary Review

"Three Books Explore the Minds Behind Motion picture Magic" on NPR'sAll Things Considered

"The Scale of the Beast" an essay which grew out of my research on taxidermy and dioramas for The Los Angeles Review of Books

"Mapping the Belly of the Whale" an essay on instruction creative writing in prison for The Common Magazine

Video Links and Events:

House of Speakeasy at Joe's Pub: An evening of acclaimed writers telling stories well-nigh their work. I was part of their first Live show in ii years. Check information technology out.

Mini Desk Tour for BookPost: A writerly bout of my workspace at the artists residency in Italy, Civitella Ranieri, for BookPost.

You Speak  past Jean Valentine : My reading of a verse form by my late mother in The Night Heron Barks.

#Nonetheless Here with StatORec

Rebecca Chace at the Bryant Park Reading Room

Writerly States: A Serial of Interviews on the Writing Process

Bank check out the podcast of my reading with NoYOU TellIt   (episode 48)

Simon and Schuster writer interview for "Leaving Stone Harbor"

Bio

Rebecca Chace is the award-winning author of Leaving Rock Harbor (novel, Scribner); Capture the Flag (novel, Simon and Schuster); Chautauqua Summertime (memoir, Harcourt-Brace); June Sparrow and The Meg Dollar Penny, her first novel for middle readers (Harper Collins). Plays: Colette (Theatre for the New Metropolis, NYC, 1993); The Awakening (adaptation of the novel by Kate Chopin) premier, Volume-It Repertory Theatre at Seattle Rep; tertiary production, Voices of the S, Memphis, TN. Ms. Chace adapted her novel, Capture the Flag, for the screen with managing director Lisanne Skyler; the Outset Tony Cox Screenwriting Award (short film), Nantucket Picture show Festival. She has written for the New York Times Magazine, New York Times Sunday Book Review, the Huffington Post, The LA Review of Books, Guernica Magazine, Lit Hub, NPR's All Things Considered and other publications. She has been awarded numerous fellowships and residencies including MacDowell, Yaddo; Dora Maar House, the Ragdale Foundation and others. She an Associate Professor of Artistic Writing and Director of the MA Program in Creative Writing and Literature at Fairleigh Dickinson University.

link to full bio

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Photograph past Nina Subin

andersoncrunter.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.rebeccachace.com/

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