Kathryn Scanlan

American writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kathryn Scanlan is an American writer. She has published two novels and a collection of short stories. Her fiction often reworks non-fictional source material, including interviews and found texts. She has won the Gordon Burn Prize and the Windham-Campbell Prize.

Born1980 (age 4546)
Iowa
OccupationWriter
Notable workAug 9 – Fog (2019), Kick the Latch (2022)
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Kathryn Scanlan
Born1980 (age 4546)
Iowa
OccupationWriter
Notable workAug 9 – Fog (2019), Kick the Latch (2022)
AwardsGordon Burn Prize, Windham-Campbell Prize
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Life and education

Scanlan was born in Iowa in 1980.[1] She grew up in rural eastern Iowa.[2][3] Her mother's family were farmers, her father's family racehorse trainers.[4]

Scanlan studied literature and art at the University of Iowa[2] then did an MFA in writing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[1][3]

She lives in Los Angeles.[1][4]

Career

Scanlan's first published short story was "Line", which appeared in NOON Annual in 2009.[5][6] NOON founder and editor Diane Williams became a mentor for Scanlan[2][3] and NOON published more of Scanlan's fiction throughout the 2010s,[7][8] including excerpts from the material that would later became her first book, Aug 9 – Fog.[9][6] Scanlan's story "The Old Mill" was published in The Iowa Review[10] and won the 2010 Iowa Review Fiction Prize.[1][11] Other stories appeared in Tin House, from which she received a scholarship to attend the 2013 Tin House Summer Workshop,[12] Fence,[13] and American Short Fiction.[14]

Scanlan published her first full-length work, Aug 9 – Fog, in 2019. The book is based on a diary that Scanlan found at an estate auction.[15][16] The diary belonged to an elderly Iowan woman, and covers the years 1968 to 1972.[17][18] Scanlan selected fragments from the 400 pages of the diary and rearranged them to form a narrative arc, ordered in five seasonal sections.[3][15] In an essay published in The Paris Review in 2019, Scanlan described how she later tracked down the diarist on Find A Grave and found out that she had died at the age of 95, four years after the diary ends.[18][16]

Scanlan's collection of short stories, The Dominant Animal, was published in 2020. Containing 40 very short stories, it focuses on the relationship between humans and the natural world, especially animals.[19][20][4] The collection continues Scanlan's mixing of genres, with some stories reworked from found texts and conversations, including an old book about Queen Victoria and Prince Albert and a conversation with a bus driver.[3]

Scanlan's second novel, Kick the Latch, was published in 2022. It is based on interviews Scanlan conducted with Iowa-born horse trainer Sonia, a family friend.[4][3] These were carried out in person and then, during the COVID-19 pandemic, over the phone.[3] The interview material is extensively reworked to form a linear narrative of the trainer's life, from birth to retirement, rendered in short chapters arranged in numbered sections.[21][17][22]

In March 2024, Kick the Latch won the Gordon Burn Prize.[23][24]

In April 2024, Scanlan was awarded the $175,000 Windham-Campbell Prize.[1][20][25]

Other work

Scanlan has also published art criticism and essays in Artforum[26][27] and Another Gaze.[28][29]

Awards

Bibliography

  • Aug 9 – Fog, MCD/FSG, 2019. ISBN 978-0374106874
  • The Dominant Animal, MCD x FSG Originals, 2020. ISBN 978-0374538293
  • Kick the Latch, New Directions, 2022. ISBN 978-0811232005

References

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