American novelist
Malena Watrous (born in San Francisco) is an American novelist , essayist , short story writer, educator, and author of numerous magazine articles.
She is a contributor to The San Francisco Chronicle ,[ 1] The New York Times ,[ 2] Real Simple , The Believer , and Salon .[ 3]
She lives in San Francisco. She attended the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop,[ 3] was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University,[ 4] and then a Jones Lecturer. She currently teaches at the Stanford Online Writers' Workshop.[ 5]
Her debut novel , If You Follow Me was released on March 9, 2010. The book has received reviews in The New York Times ,[ 6] The Boston Globe ,[ 7] Ms. Magazine , The Rumpus ,[ 8] and the San Francisco Chronicle .[ 9]
She lived and worked in Japan as an Assistant Language Teacher on the JET Programme from 1998 to 2000.[ 10] She attended Barnard College , where she majored in English and spent her free time interning for a food writer.[ 11]
References
^ 'All That Work and Still No Boys' . SFGate (September 20, 2009). Retrieved on 2016-12-22.
^ Book Review | 'Little Bird of Heaven,' by Joyce Carol Oates – The New York Times . Nytimes.com (September 17, 2009). Retrieved on 2016-12-22.
^ a b Malena Watrous . nytimesknownow.com
^ Stanford Creative Writing Program Archived November 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine . Stanford.edu (June 20, 2014). Retrieved on 2016-12-22.
^ Online Writing Courses . stanford.edu
^ Soderlind, Lori (April 1, 2010) IF YOU FOLLOW ME By Malena Watrous , New York Times
^ Malena Watrous’s debut novel is full of discoveries – The Boston Globe . Boston.com (March 8, 2010). Retrieved on 2016-12-22.
^ Life Is Not Karaoke Booth . The Rumpus.net (March 2010). Retrieved on December 22, 2016.
^ 'If You Follow Me,' by Malena Watrous – SFGate . Articles.sfgate.com (March 23, 2010). Retrieved on 2016-12-22.
^ JET Alum Author Profile: Malena Watrous . JETwit.com (September 21, 2010). Retrieved on 2016-12-22.
^ Malena Watrous . Malena Watrous. Retrieved on December 22, 2016.