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Annie Proulx (b. 1935) LINKS Newfoundlanders Read The Shipping News http://134.153.160.118/educ4142/index.html This site provides discussion of Proulx's Newfoundland connections, as well as links to reviews of The Shipping News and history and information on the Pulitzer prize. Students may share their readings of The Shipping News here.
Soundprint: A Visit with E. Annie Proulx A Canadian Broadcast Company interview with Proulx. The site also provides links to several reviews of Accordion Crimes.
BookPage Online: Accordion Crimes "A Story of the Immigrant Experience" interview with Proulx.
BIOGRAPHY In 1975, with few teaching jobs available, she abandoned work on her Ph.D. and began a perilous career in freelance journalism. In the 1980s she published six "how-to" books on a variety of subjects, including Plane and Make Your Own Fences and Gates, Walkways, Walls and Drives (1983). During this time she also raised her three sons from her third marriage while living in an isolated cabin in a rural town in Vermont. Supporting herself and her sons on her meager income as a journalist, Proulx began to write stories for fun, creating one or two a year. Most of these early stories were written for a men's magazine about hunting and fishing, where her first editor told her that she had to publish under a masculine name, "something like Joe or Zack, retrievers' names," she complained. They compromised on using her initials, E. A. Proulx, the E standing for her first name, Edna.
In 1983 and 1987, two of her stories were listed among the "Distinguished Short Stories" in Best American Short Stories. In 1988, Proulx published her first book of fiction, the nine stories set in northern Vermont constituting Heart Songs and Other Stories. Two of her three novels, Postcards (1992), and The Shipping News (1994), won prestigious awards—the PEN/Faulkner, the National Book Award, and the Pulitzer Prize.
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