Kim Wozencraft
Kim Wozencraft | |
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Kim Wozencraft in Woodstock, New York (August 18, 2012) | |
Born |
Dallas, Texas | December 4, 1954
Occupation | Writer |
Language | English |
Citizenship | American |
Education | MFA, Columbia University |
Genre | Psychological thriller, Action, Crime |
Notable works | Rush, Notes from the Country Club |
Notable awards | Best American Essays 1988 |
Website | |
www |
Kim Wozencraft is an American author. She is best known as the author of the internationally best-selling novel Rush, which was subsequently adapted into a 1991 feature film directed by Lili Fini Zanuck and starring Jennifer Jason Leigh, Jason Patric, Greg Allman and Sam Elliot.
Early life
Wozencraft was born in Dallas, Texas.
Career
Her first novel, Rush, is based on her experiences working as an undercover narcotics agent in Texas soon after President Richard Nixon declared the War on Drugs. Her novel, Notes From the Country Club, grew out of time served in federal prison. Wozencraft co-edited the book Slam, a companion edition to the award winning 1998 film. She was executive editor at Prison Life magazine, has written for HBO Films, and her work has appeared in The Best American Essays, Texas Monthly, New York Newsday, the Los Angeles Times, and various literary magazines and anthologies.
Education
Wozencraft took her Master of Fine Arts degree at Columbia University.
Selected works
- Rush (1990)
- Notes from the Country Club (1993)
- The Catch (1998)
- Slam (1998)
- Wanted (2004)
- The Devil's Backbone (2006)