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Mark Merlis
American writer and health policy analyst (1950 –2017) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mark Merlis (March 9, 1950 – August 15, 2017[1]) was an American writer and health policy analyst.[2][3]
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Biography
Born in Framingham, Massachusetts on March 9, 1950 and raised in Baltimore, Maryland,[2] Merlis attended Wesleyan University and Brown University.[2] He subsequently took a job with the Maryland Department of Health to support himself while writing.[2] In 1987, he took a job with the Congressional Research Service at the Library of Congress as a social legislation specialist, and was involved in the creation of the Ryan White Care Act.[2]
Beginning in the 1990s, Merlis published a series of novels.[2] His first novel, American Studies, was published in 1994[4] and won the Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBT Literature and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction in 1995,[3] and his second, An Arrow's Flight, was published in 1998[5] and won the 1999 Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction.[3] He published two further novels during his lifetime, Man About Town in 2003[6] and JD in 2015.[7][8]
Merlis lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and worked both as an author and an independent health policy consultant.[3]
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Illness and death
Merlis died on August 15, 2017, at the Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia, from pneumonia associated with ALS.[1] He was sixty-seven years old. He is survived by his husband of many years, Robert Ashe.[3]
Works
- American Studies (1994)
- An Arrow's Flight (1998) - also published as Pyrrhus (1999)
- Man About Town (2003)
- JD (2015)
References
External links
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