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Elizabeth Stuckey-French

American short story writer and novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Elizabeth Stuckey-French is an American short story writer, novelist, and professor.

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Early life and education

Stuckey-French was born in Little Rock. She grew up in the town of Lafayette, Indiana.[citation needed]

She graduated from Purdue University and was founding editor of the Sycamore Review.[1] She was a James A. Michener Fellow at the Iowa Writers Workshop; she graduated with an MFA in 1992.[citation needed]

Career

Stucky-French's stories have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, The Gettysburg Review, The Southern Review, Five Points,[citation needed] Narrative.[2] She teaches creative writing at Florida State University.[3]

Reception

Richard Russo, in his commentary about the selections in the 2005 O. Henry anthology, called Stuckey-French's "Mudlavia", "the one that burrowed deepest under my skin". He praised the "simplicity of its storytelling; the way its private and public stories play off each other; its fond, gentle humor; the heartbreaking, hard-won wisdom of its narrator."[4]

Personal life

Stuckey-French lived in Tallahassee, Florida with her husband Ned Stuckey-French and her two daughters. Ned died of cancer in June 2019.[5]

Awards

Works

Short stories

  • "Junior," The Atlantic, April 1996
  • "Electric Wizard," The Atlantic, June 1998
  • "Mudlavia," The Atlantic, September 2003
  • The First Paper Girl in Red Oak, Iowa. Doubleday. 2000. ISBN 978-0-385-49893-7.
  • Tenderloin and other stories. 1992.

Novels

Anthologies

Non-fiction

  • Janet Burroway; Elizabeth Stuckey-French (2007). Writing fiction: a guide to narrative craft. Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-0-321-38414-0.
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References

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