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Adrienne Brodeur
American author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Adrienne Brodeur[1] is an American writer. She is the author of the best-selling memoir Wild Game: My Mother, Her Lover and Me (2019) and the novel Little Monsters (2023), as well as the novel Man Camp (2005).[2] She has also written for publications such as The New York Times, The Oprah Magazine, Vogue, and Glamour. Brodeur is executive director of Aspen Words, a literary arts nonprofit and program of The Aspen Institute. She launched the Aspen Words Literary Prize in 2017.[3]
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Early life and education
Brodeur is the daughter of New Yorker writer Paul Brodeur and food writer Malabar Brewster.[4] Her grandfather was the board chairman of Dayton, Price & Co., Ltd., a New York exporting and shipping firm.[5][6] Her mother remarried in 1974 to Henry Hornblower II, a grandson of Henry Hornblower, founder of the investment firm Hornblower & Weeks, which eventually became part of Lehman Brothers through various mergers. Her stepfather founded the Plimoth Plantation and served as its president.[6]
She was raised on Cape Cod. In her memoir, Brodeur writes about her relationship with her mother, whose affair she helped hide from her stepfather Charles Greenwood.[7][8] In interviews she has said that it took her two and a half years to write the book and "a lifetime to process [it].[9]"
She obtained her BA from Columbia University and received an MPA from the University of Pennsylvania.[10][11]
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Career
In 1997, Brodeur founded the fiction magazine, Zoetrope: All-Story, with filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola.[12] She served as editor-in-chief until 2002.[13]
In 2005, Brodeur became an editor at Harcourt HMH Books, where she acquired and edited literary fiction and memoir.[1] She left publishing in 2013 to become Creative Director of Aspen Words, where she is now executive director. In 2017, Brodeur launched the Aspen Words Literary Prize, a $35,000 annual award for an influential work of fiction that illuminates a vital contemporary issue and demonstrates the transformative power of literature on thought and culture.[3]
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Personal life
Brodeur splits her time between Cambridge, Massachusetts and Cape Cod. She lives with her husband and two children.[1]
External links
- Official website[14]
References
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