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Stuart
Dybek has published three short story collections: Childhood
and Other Neighborhoods, The Coast of Chicago, and I
Sailed With Magellan; and two volumes of poetry: Brass
Knuckles and
Streets in Their Own Ink. He has been anthologized frequently
and regularly appears in magazines such as the New Yorker,
the Atlantic, Harper’s Magazine and the Paris
Review.
He has received
numerous awards, including: a 1998 Lannan Award; the 1995
PEN/Bernard Malamud Prize "for distinctive achievement
in the short story"; an Academy Institute Award in Fiction
from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1994; a Guggenheim
Fellowship; two fellowships from the NEA; a residency at the Rockefeller
Foundation's Bellagio Center; and a Whiting Writers Award. He has
also received four O. Henry Prizes, including an O. Henry first
prize for his story, "Hot Ice." Dybek's story, "Blight," was
awarded the Nelson Algren Prize and his collection, Childhood
and Other Neighborhoods, which was nominated for the National
Book
Critics' Circle Award, received the 1981 Prize for Fiction from
the Society of Midland Authors and the Cliff Dwellers Award from
the Friends of Literature.
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Dybek grew up on
Chicago’s
South Side in a Polish-American neighborhood called Pilsen
or Little Village, which is also the main setting for his fiction.
He received an M.A. in Literature from Loyola University in
Chicago
and an M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. He teaches at Western
Michigan University when he is not in Chicago.
“[The
Coast of Chicago] is a book about trying to bridge
polarities: the past and future, tradition and assimilation,
hopelessness and joy, night and day.” -Don Lee, Ploughshares editor
To view Special
Collections' holdings of Stuart Dybek's work, please click
here.
To hear Dybek read
from his own work, please visit the Vincent Voice Library,
here.
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