Winter 2009University Digest

Story Genius

Creative writing professor wins prestigious grant

Deborah Eisenberg Photo courtesy of the MacArthur Foundation

Short story writer Deborah Eisenberg was awarded a MacArthur Foundation “genius” grant in September. The half-million dollar grants allow luminaries in fields as diverse as mathematics, biology and the arts to advance their work, no strings attached.

Eisenberg has been compared to a black swan, a Jazz Age divorcée and a European ballet mistress with a haunted past; her writing is rich with a bewitching elegance. It reveals a cut-glass intelligence restrained only by compassion for the boundlessness of human foibles and reverence for what can’t be known.

In the title piece of her most recent collection, Twilight of the Superheroes, a group of twenty-something friends witness the World Trade Center explosions from their terrace. The story explores the disjuncture between the violent transformation of her characters’ world view post-9/11 and the uninterrupted business of day-to-day life.

“It was as if there had been a curtain, a curtain painted with the map of the earth, its oceans and continents … The planes struck, tearing through the curtain of that blue September morning, exposing the dark world that lay right behind it, of populations ruthlessly exploited, inflamed with hatred, and tired of waiting for change to happen by.”

Eisenberg’s other short story collections include All Around Atlantis, Under the 82nd Airborne and Transactions in a Foreign Currency.

Comments

    There are no comments for this article yet. Begin the discussion below!

Leave a Reply

U.Va. Magazine welcomes your respectful discussion. Comments are subject to editorial moderation. Review our user guidelines for more information »




HIGHLIGHTS

  • 1977: Ms. Rhodes Scholar

    1977: Ms. Rhodes Scholar

    Catherine Burke Sweet (Col ’77), one of the first female Rhodes Scholars, went to England to study in the late '70s and she never moved back.

  • All-Time Biggest Crowds at Home Football Games

    All-Time Biggest Crowds at Home Football Games

    The top five record-breaking crowds at Scott Stadium. Were you there?

  • Rekindling Desire

    Rekindling Desire

    A new drug shows promise for women who lack sexual desire.

  • A Stitch in Time

    A Stitch in Time

    Admire rare and beautiful items of clothing from the 1790s to the 1950s that are held in the Collection of Historic Dress.

  • Pioneer of Beer

    Pioneer of Beer

    Tired of the same old brew, Charlie Papazian (Engr ’72) learned to brew his own beer, wrote a book about it and revolutionized American brewing.

  • High Expectations

    High Expectations

    U.Va. baseball coach Brian O'Connor talks about last year's spectacular season and his aspirations for this year's College World Series.

  • Building, but not Sprawling

    Building, but not Sprawling

    Curious about new construction projects on Grounds? See what new buildings will look like when they're done and how much they'll cost.

  • Spicy Literature

    Spicy Literature

    Dave DeWitt (Col '66) has written nearly 40 books about chile peppers and spicy foods. What fuels his piquant obsession?

  • Ultra Dedicated

    Ultra Dedicated

    Meet two women who run 100 mile races across treacherous terrain and through bad weather; they run ultramarathons with apt names such as Hellgate.

  • Working Vacation

    Working Vacation

    How Alternative Spring Break changed the perspective of students who have participated in the program.