Difference between revisions of "Author:Rolaine Hochstein"
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70 East 10th Street | 70 East 10th Street |
Latest revision as of 20:18, 21 January 2013
This is an ISFDB Bibliographic Comments page for the author (or artist or editor) Rolaine Hochstein. This page may be used for bibliographic comments or extended notes about the author, or discussion on how to the author's works are to be recorded . The link above leads to the ISFDB summary record for Rolaine Hochstein. Please use Bio:Rolaine Hochstein for a biographical sketch of this person. To discuss what should go on this page, use the talk page. For more on this and other header templates, see Header templates. |
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Rolaine Hochstein
70 East 10th Street
New York, N.Y. 10003
MFA Columbia University BA Syracuse University
NOVELS
Table 47 Doubleday & Company Stepping Out W. W. Norton
STORIES
Prairie Schooner, Antioch Review, Atlantic Monthly, Confrontation, Kansas Quarterly, The Journal (OSU), Other Voices, North American Review, Fantasy & Science Fiction, The Literary Review, Cimarron Review, The Fiddlehead, Massachusetts Review, Kalliope, et. al.
ANTHOLOGIES
Pushcart Prize XIX Fiction (France) translation O. Henry Prize Stories NagyVilag (Hungary) translation NOVA (high school textbook) O. Henry Prize Stories The Annotated Night Before Christmas Martin Gardner’s Favorite Poetic Parodies
AWARDS
First Prize, Seaton Fiction Award Kansas State Art Council Outstanding Writer, Pushcart Prize Collection (3 times) Distinguished Short Story, Best American Short Stories (twice) Honor Roll, Best American Short Stories
FELLOWSHIPS
MacDowell Colony New Jersey State Council on the Arts Yaddo
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
PEN New York City Writers Room New Jersey Writers’ Project Girls Write Now
Literary agent: Emilie Jacobson at Curtis Brown, Ltd. Email ejj@cbltd.com
BIOGRAPHY
Rolaine Hochstein has been a teaching artist since 1986. Her novels Stepping Out and Table 47 were published by Norton and Doubleday respectively. She has published over thirty short stories, which have won two O. Henry prizes, the Pushcart prize, and the Seaton First Prize of the Kansas Arts Council, among other citations.
Her articles on women issues have appeared frequently in such magazines as Good Housekeeping, Seventeen, Glamour, Parents and Ms. Non-fiction books include The Seventeen Guide to Knowing Yourself and The Seventeen Guide to You and Other People (both written with. Daniel A. Sugarman, Ph.D. She has received fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo and the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. She is a member of PEN and the New York City Writers Room.