Kathryn Trueblood

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Kathryn Trueblood
EducationUniversity of California, Berkeley
University of Washington
Occupation(s)Professor of English
Writer
EmployerWestern Washington University
Websitekathryntrueblood.com

Kathryn Trueblood is an American author. She is most known as a writer of fiction whose work focuses on the medical humanities.[1] She is the recipient of the Goldenberg Prize for Fiction from the Bellevue Literary Review[2] and the 2011 Red Hen Press Short Story Award.[3] Trueblood's work has been critically well received by major publishing trade magazines like Kirkus Reviews[4] and Publishers Weekly.[5]

Trueblood was born and raised in California.[citation needed] She attended the Avalon School, a unified K-12 school on Catalina Island.[citation needed] She matriculated from University of California, Berkeley, and went on to study at University of Washington, where she earned a Master of Fine Arts degree.[citation needed] She now lives in Washington.[citation needed]

Trueblood has twice been diagnosed with a chronic illness—first Graves disease, and then Crohn's.[6] She has been frank about the challenges of parenting with a chronic illness[7] and the influences this has on her writing.

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