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Mona Simpson
Mona Simpson was born in Green Bay, Wisconsin, in 1957; when she was ten, her
parents separated and she moved with her mother to California. Although this detail of
her life story is similar to that which makes up the core situation of Anywhere But
Here, Simpson tends to be reticent about the extent to which her fiction borrows from
the details of her life. She has said, "What I'd finally say about truth and
autobiography is that all writers are probably trying to get at some core truth of life,
at some configuration that is enduring and truthful. I just haven't found the truth to
be my vehicle."5
After getting her B.A. in creative writing at Berkeley, she did an M.F.A. at Columbia,
where she began work on Anywhere But Here. Upon finishing her M.F.A. she worked for
several years as an editor at the Paris Review. Since the enormous success of Anywhere
But Here, Simpson has written The Lost Father and A Regular Guy, which have contributed
further to her impressive critical reputation. She was named one of Granta's Best Young
American Novelists and has won several prestigious awards, including the Whiting
Writer's Award, a Guggenheim grant, the Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University, and a
grant from the Lila WallaceĞReader's Digest Foundation. Since 1988 she has taught at
Bard College, where she is the Sadie Samuelson Levy Professor of Languages and
Literature. She lives with her husband and son in New York City and in Santa Monica,
California.
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