Donna Tartt
Donna Tartt | |||
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File:Donna Tartt.jpg
Tartt in 2015
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Born | Greenwood, Mississippi, U.S. |
December 23, 1963 ||
Occupation | Fiction writer | ||
Education | University of Mississippi Bennington College (BA) |
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Period | 1992–present | ||
Literary movement | Neo-romanticism | ||
Notable works | The Secret History (1992) The Little Friend (2002) The Goldfinch (2013) |
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Notable awards | WH Smith Literary Award 2003 The Little Friend Pulitzer Prize for Fiction 2014 The Goldfinch |
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Donna Louise Tartt (born December 23, 1963)[2] is an American novelist and essayist. Her novels are The Secret History (1992), The Little Friend (2002), and The Goldfinch (2013), which has been adapted into a 2019 film of the same name[3] She was included in Time magazine's 2014 "100 Most Influential People" list.[4]
Contents
Early life and education
Donna Louise Tartt was born in Greenwood, Mississippi, in the Mississippi Delta, the elder of two daughters. She was raised in the nearby town of Grenada. Her father, Don Tartt, was a rockabilly musician, turned freeway "service station owner-cum-local politician", while her mother, Taylor, was a secretary.[5][6][7] Her parents were avid readers, and her mother would read while driving.[8] As a child, Tartt memorized "really long poems by A. A. Milne", and described herself as a "horrible repository of doggerel verse."[5]
Tartt wrote her first poem in 1968, when she was 5 years old.[9] She was first published at 13, when a sonnet was included in a 1976 edition of the Mississippi Review.[5][10] In high school, she was a freshman cheerleader for the basketball team and worked in the public library.[6][11][12] Tartt's essays about patriotism and alcoholism won prizes,[5] and she also wrote "short stories about death" during this period.[5]
In 1981, Tartt enrolled in the University of Mississippi, where she pledged for the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and wrote short stories for The Daily Mississippian.[5] An editor at the paper gave one of her stories to prominent writer Willie Morris, who found Tartt at the Holiday Inn bar one evening and declared her "a genius."[9][13][14][15][16] Following a recommendation from Morris, Barry Hannah, then an Ole Miss writer-in-residence, admitted the eighteen-year-old Tartt into his graduate course on the short story. Hannah referred to her as "deeply literary", and "a literary star."[17]
In 1982, following the suggestion of Morris and others, she transferred to Bennington College. At Bennington, Tartt studied classics with Claude Fredericks, and also met Bret Easton Ellis, Jonathan Lethem, and Jill Eisenstadt.[18][2] Tartt graduated in 1986 with a degree in philosophy.[19][20]
Career
The Secret History (1992)[21][22] was derived from her time at Bennington College.[23] Amanda Urban was her agent and the novel became a critical and financial success.[24][25] Vanity Fair called Tartt a precocious literary genius, as she was just 29 years old.[26]
Tartt's novel The Little Friend (2002) was first published in Dutch, since her books sold more per capita in the Netherlands than elsewhere.[27][28][29][30][31]
In 2006, Tartt's short story "The Ambush" was included in the Best American Short Stories 2006.[32]
Her 2013 novel The Goldfinch stirred reviewers as to whether it was a literary novel, a controversy possibly based on its best-selling status.[26][33][34] The book was adapted for the movie The Goldfinch. Tartt was reportedly paid $3m for the movie rights but parted company with her long-standing agent, Amanda Urban, over the latter's failure to secure Tartt a role in the screenplay writing or wider production.[35] The movie was a critical and commercial failure.[36][37]
Tartt is a convert to Catholicism and contributed an essay, "The spirit and writing in a secular world", to The Novel, Spirituality and Modern Culture (2000). In her essay she wrote that "faith is vital in the process of making my work and in the reasons I am driven to make it."[38] However, Tartt also warned of the danger of writers who impose their beliefs or convictions on their novels. She wrote that writers should "shy from asserting those convictions directly in their work."[38][5]
She has spent about ten years writing each of her novels.[26][39][40]
Personal life
In 2002, it was reported that Tartt had lived in Greenwich Village, the Upper East Side,[41] and on a farm near Charlottesville, Virginia.[42] Tartt is 5 feet (1.5 m) tall.[43] She has also stated that she would never get married.[44]
In 2013, Tartt claimed that she was not a recluse while stressing the freedoms of shutting the door, closing the curtains and not participating in the life of culture.[39]
In 2016, Tartt's cousin, police officer James Lee Tartt, was killed while on duty.[45]
As of 2016, Virginia Living published that Tartt lived with art gallery owner Neal Guma. Both of them studied at Bennington. She and her partner purchased the Charlottesville property back in 1997.[46] Tartt also dedicated her second novel to someone named Neal, although she does not elaborate his identity.
Awards
- 2003 WH Smith Literary Award – The Little Friend
- 2003 Orange Prize for Fiction shortlist – The Little Friend
- 2013 National Book Critics Circle Award (fiction) shortlist – The Goldfinch[47]
- 2014 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction shortlist – The Goldfinch[48]
- 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction – The Goldfinch[49]
- 2014 Time 100 Most Influential People[4]
- 2014 Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence for Fiction – The Goldfinch[50]
- 2014 Vanity Fair International Best Dressed List[51]
Bibliography
Works authored by
Novels
- The Secret History (1992, Alfred A. Knopf)
- The Little Friend (2002, Alfred A. Knopf)
- The Goldfinch (2013, Little, Brown)
Short stories
- "Tam-O'-Shanter", The New Yorker, April 19, 1993, pp. 90–91[52]
- "A Christmas Pageant", Harper's Magazine 287.1723, December 1993, pp. 45–51
- "A Garter Snake", GQ 65.5, May 1995, pp. 89ff
- "The Ambush", The Guardian, June 25, 2005
Nonfiction
- "Sleepytown: A Southern Gothic Childhood, with Codeine", Harper's Magazine 285.1706, July 1992, pp. 60–66
-
- Tartt's great-grandfather gave the five-year-old, for tonsillitis, whiskey, and codeine cough syrup, for two years, when kept home due to tonsillitis, she would read and write poetry.[53]
- "Basketball Season" in The Best American Sports Writing, edited and with an introduction by Frank Deford, Houghton Mifflin, 1993
- "Team Spirit: Memories of Being a Freshman Cheerleader for the Basketball Team", Harper's Magazine 288.1727, April 1994, pp. 37–40
- "My friend, my mentor, my inspiration". in Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- "Afterword" in True Grit, Charles Portis, Overlook Press, New York, 2010, pp. 255-267
Audiobooks read by
Works by Tartt
- The Secret History
- The Little Friend (abridged)
Works by others
- True Grit by Charles Portis (read by and with an afterword by Tartt)
- Winesburg, Ohio by Sherwood Anderson (selections)
References
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General references
- Hargreaves, Tracy (2001). Donna Tartt's "The Secret History". New York and London: Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-5320-1.
- Kakutani, Michiko (1992). "Students Indulging in Course of Destruction". The New York Times, September 4, 1992.
- Kaplan, James (September 1992). "Smart Tartt". Vanity Fair.
- McOran-Campbell, Adrian (August 2000). The Secret History.
- Tartt, Donna (2000). "Spanish Grandeur in Mississippi". Oxford American, Fall 2000.
- Yee, Danny (1994). "Studying Ancient Greek Warps the Mind of the Young?"
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
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Wikiquote has quotations related to: Donna Tartt |
- Donna Tartt interviewed by Robert Birnbaum at identitytheory.com
- Tartt Interview Archived June 4, 2015, at the Wayback Machine with Jill Eisenstadt in Bomb
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. video at YouTube
- Donna Tartt and Anne Rice interviewed by Ray Suarez, NPR: Talk of the Nation: (October 30, 1997)
- Donna Tartt interviewed by Lynn Neary, NPR: Talk of the Nation: (November 5, 2002)
- Tartt on reading and her Scottish grandmother Archived February 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine at Maud Newton
- Tartt in Vogue on her teenage worship of Hunter S. Thompson Archived April 7, 2013, at the Wayback Machine at Maud Newton
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- Donna Tartt interviewed by James Naughtie at BBC Radio 4 – Bookclub (January 5, 2014)
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- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Patchett, Ann (April 23, 2014). "Donna Tartt" Archived April 8, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. Time.
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- 1963 births
- 20th-century American novelists
- 21st-century American novelists
- American women novelists
- Bennington College alumni
- Converts to Roman Catholicism
- Living people
- American psychological fiction writers
- People from Greenwood, Mississippi
- Novelists from Mississippi
- Pulitzer Prize for Fiction winners
- 20th-century American women writers
- 21st-century American women writers
- People from Grenada, Mississippi
- Catholics from Mississippi
- American Roman Catholic writers