Elisa Albert is the author of After Birth, The Book of Dahlia, the short story collection How This Night Is Different, and the editor of the anthology Freud's Blind Spot. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Tin House, The New York Times, Post Road, The Guardian, Gulf Coast, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Believer, The Rumpus, Time Magazine, on NPR, and in many anthologies. Albert grew up in Los Angeles and received an MFA from Columbia University, where she was a Lini Mazumdar Fellow. A recipient of the Moment magazine emerging writer award and a finalist for the Sami Rohr Prize, she has received fellowships from The Virginia Center for Creative Arts, Djerassi, Vermont Studio Center, The Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies in Holland, the HWK in Germany, and the Amsterdam Writer's Residency. She lives with her family in upstate New York.
"A dark, witty, and incisive take on modern-day disaffected Jewish
youth." -- Variety
"A wonder-inducing blend of sharp humor, religious ambivalence, and
caustic wisdom." -- Time Out New York
"Albert employs razor-sharp irony to deftly dissect how
contemporary life gets tangled with ancient traditions...outrageous
and poignant, dark and funny." -- Hartford Courant
"Albert's protagonists are young Americans each imbued with an
uncannily sharp voice, each boldly confronting their intricately
conflicted lives, each looking on the world with convincing
lucidity and reacting with moving joie de vivre." -- San Francisco
Chronicle
"What makes How This Night Is Different different is simply the
fact that Elisa Albert is a funny and gutsy writer with a knack for
locating the absurd poignancy in familiar situations. This is an
accomplished, moving, and often risky debut." -- Sam Lipsyte,
author of Home Land
Titled to reflect the customary question asked at Passover, these 10 stories by debut writer Albert explore traditional Jewish rituals with youthful, irreverent exuberance as her characters transition into marriage and child-rearing. In "Everything But," dutiful daughter Erin finds herself, after her mother's death, disturbed by the lovelessness of her marriage. In "So Long," Rachel has become "born again" as an Orthodox Jew and resolved to have her head shaved before her marriage, as per custom; the narrator, Rachel's maid of honor, struggles to suppress her sarcastic disbelief. "The Mother Is Always Upset" plays on the familial chaos of ritual circumcision (the bris): tearful mother Beth cowers in the bedroom, while exhausted new father Mark takes his cue from the sanguine mohel. And Albert, writing as nice Jewish girl Elisa Albert, becomes a cocksure writer determined to have the last word in the hilariously vulgar postmodern final story, "Etta or Bessie or Dora or Rose"-an unabashed autobiographical fan letter to Philip Roth, "the father of us all." (July) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
"A dark, witty, and incisive take on modern-day disaffected Jewish
youth." -- Variety
"A wonder-inducing blend of sharp humor, religious ambivalence, and
caustic wisdom." -- Time Out New York
"Albert employs razor-sharp irony to deftly dissect how
contemporary life gets tangled with ancient traditions...outrageous
and poignant, dark and funny." -- Hartford Courant
"Albert's protagonists are young Americans each imbued with an
uncannily sharp voice, each boldly confronting their intricately
conflicted lives, each looking on the world with convincing
lucidity and reacting with moving joie de vivre." -- San
Francisco Chronicle
"What makes How This Night Is Different different is simply
the fact that Elisa Albert is a funny and gutsy writer with a knack
for locating the absurd poignancy in familiar situations. This is
an accomplished, moving, and often risky debut." -- Sam Lipsyte,
author of Home Land
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