Tova Mirvis

American novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tova Mirvis (born 1972) is an American novelist. She is a graduate of Columbia College of Columbia University and holds a masters of fine arts degree in fiction writing from Columbia University School of the Arts. Mirvis' family has lived in Memphis, Tennessee, since 1874 when her German-born grandmother moved there at age two.[citation needed]

Born1972 (age 5354)
Occupation
  • Author
  • essayist
  • memoirist
LanguageEnglish
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Tova Mirvis
Born1972 (age 5354)
Occupation
  • Author
  • essayist
  • memoirist
LanguageEnglish
EducationColumbia College
Columbia University School of the Arts (MFA)[1]
SpouseAaron (pseud., m. 1997; div. 2012)[2][3][4]
William (pseud.?, m. ca. 2016)[5][6][7]
Children3
Website
www.tovamirvis.com
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Wendy Shalit essay

Mirvis was the subject of a 2005 essay by Wendy Shalit entitled "The Observant Reader"[8] in The New York Times Book Review which accused Mirvis, an Orthodox Jew, of writing ostensibly "'insider' fiction (that) actually reveals the authors' estrangement from the traditional Orthodox community." Mirvis defended herself in an essay in The Forward.[9]

Writings

Tova Mirvis at the East Meadow Public Library, presenting The Book of Separation

Mirvis's published works include:[10]

Books

Novels
  • The Ladies Auxiliary. W. W. Norton & Company. 1999. ISBN 9780393078343.
  • The Outside World. Knopf/Vintage. 2004. ISBN 9780307429124.
  • Visible City. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 2014. ISBN 978-0-544-04774-7.
Memoir

Shorter works

Essays and other pieces

Stories

References

Sources

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