Hanya Yanagihara

Hanya Yanagihara
Born Hanya K Yanagihara
(1974-09-20) September 20, 1974
Los Angeles, California[1]
Occupation Author, writer, journalist
Nationality American
Alma mater Smith College[2]
Notable works A Little Life (2015)
The People in The Trees (2013)

Hanya Yanagihara (born September 20, 1974)[3] is an American novelist and travel writer of Hawaiian ancestry.[4]

Early life

Yanagihara was born in Los Angeles, California, a fourth-generation Hawaiian, to a father who was a hematologist/oncologist,[4] Richard Yanagihara,[5] from Hawaii and a mother who was born in Seoul. She frequently moved around the United States as a child, due to her father's occupation. The family lived in multiple locations, including Hawaii, New York City, Baltimore, Maryland, California, and Texas.[6]

She attended Punahou High School in Hawaii.[7]

Career

Following her graduation from the women's college Smith College in 1995, Yanagihara moved to New York and worked for several years as a publicist.[4] In 2007, Yanagihara began writing for Condé Nast Traveler where she became an editor before leaving in 2015 to become a deputy editor at the style magazine T: The New York Times Style Magazine.

Her first novel, The People in the Trees, based on the real-life case of the virologist Daniel Carleton Gajdusek, was praised as one of the best novels of 2013.[4]

Yanagihara's A Little Life was published in March 2015, again receiving predominantly favorable reviews,[8] and defying expectations by its editor, Yanagihara's agent, and the author herself that it would not sell well.[9] One notable exception was Daniel Mendelsohn for the New York Review of Books, who sharply critiqued A Little Life's technical execution, its depictions of violence, which Mendelsohn found ethically and aesthetically gratuitous, and its position with respect to the representation of queer life or issues by a presumed-heterosexual author.[10] Mendelsohn's review prompted a response from Gerald Howard, the book's publisher, in a letter to which Mendelsohn responded in turn.[11][12] On September 15, 2015, the book was shortlisted for the 2015 Man Booker Prize for fiction.[13] Yanagihara was also selected as a finalist for the 2015 National Book Award in Fiction for A Little Life.

Works and publications

References

  1. "Hanya Yanagihara | The Man Booker Prizes". themanbookerprize.com. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  2. "WordSmith « - Smith College Office of Alumnae Relations Smith College Office of Alumnae Relations". alumnae.smith.edu. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  3. "Hanya K Yanagihara - California Birth Index". FamilySearch. 20 September 1974. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Nazaryan, Alexander (19 March 2015). "Author Hanya Yanagihara's Not-So-Little Life". Newsweek. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  5. "Talking with Hanya Yanagihara About Her Debut Novel, The People in the Trees". Vogue. 12 August 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  6. "Hanya Yanagihara: 'I wanted everything turned up a little too high'". The Guardian. July 26, 2015.
  7. Kidd, James (5 January 2014). "Maverick in a Pacific Tempest: Hanya Yanagihara on being a". The Independent. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  8. Sacks, Sam (6 March 2015). "Fiction Chronicle: Jude the Obscure". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
  9. Maloney, Jennifer (3 September 2015). "How 'A Little Life' Became a Sleeper Hit". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
  10. Mendelsohn, Daniel (3 December 2015). "A Striptease Among Pals". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  11. Howard, Gerald (17 December 2015). "Too Hard to Take". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  12. Alison, Flood (2 December 2015). "Debate erupts as Hanya Yanagihara's editor takes on critic over bad review of A Little Life". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  13. "The Man Booker Prize for Fiction 2015 shortlist is revealed". The Man Booker Prize. 15 September 2015. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
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