Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

George Szanto

American-Canadian novelist, playwright, critic, and scholar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

George Szanto (born 1940) is an American-Canadian novelist, playwright, critic, and scholar. His published work includes more than a dozen novels and short-story collections as well as plays, full-length works of literary criticism, mysteries, and a memoir. His work has also appeared in literary periodicals including the Kansas Quarterly, the Bucknell Review, the Massachusetts Review, and the Canadian Comparative Literature Review and in anthologies. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and he won the Hugh MacLennan Award for Fiction in 1995 for his novel Friends & Marriages.[1]

Quick facts Born, Other names ...

Born in Derry, Northern Ireland, Szanto attended Dartmouth College in the United States, the University of Frankfurt am Main in Germany, and the University of Aix-Marseille in France before completing a Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1967. During his academic career, Szanto taught comparative and dramatic literature at the University of California, San Diego, and comparative literature at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec.[1]

Remove ads

Bibliography

Summarize
Perspective

Short story collections

  • Sixteen Ways to Skin a Cat (1977)[1]
  • Duets (with Per Brask) (1989)[2]

Novels

  • Not Working (1982)[1]
  • The Underside of Stones: A Story Cycle (1990)[1]
  • Friends & Marriages (1994)[1]
  • The Condesa of M (2001)[1]
  • Second Sight (2004)
  • The Tartarus House on Crab[3]
  • Whatever Lola Wants (2014)[4]

Mysteries

Four novels, co-authored with Sandy Frances Duncan, comprise the Islands Investigations International Mysteries, as follows:

  • Never Sleep with a Suspect on Gabriola Island (2009)[5]
  • Always Kiss the Corpse on Whidbey Island (2010)[6]
  • Never Hug a Mugger on Quadra Island (2011)[7]
  • Always Love a Villain on San Juan Island (2013)[8]

Criticism

  • Narrative Consciousness: Structure and Perception in the Fiction of Kafka, Beckett and Robbe-Grillet (1972)[1]
  • Theater and Propaganda (1978)[1]
  • Narrative Taste and Social Perspectives: The Matter of Quality (1987)[1]
  • Inside the Statues of Saints: Mexican Writers Talk About Culture and Corruption, Politics and Daily Life[9]

Biography

  • Bog Tender: Coming Home to Nature and Memory (2013)[10]

Drama

  • The New Black Crook (1971)[1]
  • Chinchill! (with Milton Savage) (1972)[1]
  • After the Ceremony (1978)[1]
  • The Next Move (1981)[1]

Satire

  • A modest proposition to the people of Canada concerning the pervasive ills and divisions afflicting the nation, including but not limited to the anguish of a land rent asunder by heinous tax bills, curtailment of economic opportunity, the plight of the middle classes, and Quebec (with Per Brask and the Committee Responsible for the Oversight of Canadian Conflict) (1992)[11]
Remove ads

Awards

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads