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Phillip
Lopate was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1943, and received a BA
from Columbia in 1964, and a doctorate from the Union Graduate School
in 1979. He has written three personal essay collections -- Bachelorhood
(Little, Brown, 1981), Against Joie de Vivre (Poseidon-Simon
& Schuster, 1989), and Portrait of My Body (Doubleday-Anchor,
1996); two novels, Confessions of Summer (Doubleday, 1979)
and The Rug Merchant (Viking, 1987); two poetry collections,
The Eyes Don't Always Want to Stay Open (Sun Press, 1972)
and The Daily Round (Sun Press, 1976); a memoir of his teaching
experiences, Being With Children (Doubleday, 1975); a collection
of his movie criticism, Totally Tenderly Tragically (Doubleday-Anchor);
an urbanist meditation, Waterfront: A Journey Around Manhattan
(Crown, 2004); and a biographical monograph, Rudy Burckhardt:
Photographer and Filmmaker (Harry N. Abrams, 2004.) In addition,
there is a Phillip Lopate reader, Getting Personal: Selected
Writings (Basic Books, 2003).
He has edited
the following anthologies: The Art of the Personal Essay (Doubleday-Anchor,
1994); Writing New York (Library of America, 1998), Journey
of a Living Experiment (Virgil Press, 1979), a best essays of
the year series, The Anchor Essay Annual (1997-99), and the
forthcoming American Movie Critics (Library of America, 2006).
His essays, fiction, poetry, film and architectural criticism have
appeared in The Best American Short Stories (1974), The
Best American Essays (1987), several Pushcart Prize annuals,
The Paris Review, Harper's, Vogue, Esquire, Film Comment,
Threepenny Review, Double Take, New York Times, Harvard Educational
Review, Preservation, Cite, 7 Days, Metropolis, Conde Nast Traveler,
and many other periodicals and anthologies.
He has been
awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a New York Public Library
Center for Scholars and Writers Fellowship, two National Endowment
for the Arts grants, and two New York Foundation for the Arts grants.
He received a Christopher medal for Being With Children,
a Texas Institute of Letters award in the best non-fiction book
of the year category for Bachelorhood , and was a finalist
for the PEN best essay book of the year award for Portrait of
My Body. His anthology, Writing New York, received a
citation from the New York Society Library and honorable mention
from the Municipal Art Society's Brendan Gill Award.
After working
with children for twelve years as a writer in the schools, he taught
creative writing and literature at Fordham, Cooper Union, University
of Houston, and New York University. He currently holds the John
Cranford Adams Chair at Hofstra University, and also teaches in
the MFA graduate programs at Columbia, the New School and
Bennington.
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