Ann Hood | |
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Hood at the 2014 Brooklyn Book Festival
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Born | Ann Hood December 9, 1956 West Warwick, Rhode Island |
Occupation | Novelist, short-story writer, memoirist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1987—present |
Notable works |
Somewhere Off The Coast Of Maine (1987) |
Spouse | Lorne Adrain |
Partner | 4 |
Website | |
Official website |
Somewhere Off The Coast Of Maine (1987)
The Knitting Circle (2005)
The Red Thread (2010)
Ann Hood (born 1956) is an American novelist and short story writer; she has also written nonfiction. The author of fifteen books, her essays and short stories have appeared in many journals, magazines, and anthologies, including The Paris Review, Ploughshares,, and Tin House. Hood is a regular contributor to The New York Times' Op-Ed page, Home Economics column. Her most recent work is Knitting Pearls: Writers Writing about Knitting, published with W.W. Norton and Company in fall of 2015.
She is a faculty member in the MFA in Creative Writing program at The New School in New York City. Hood was born in West Warwick, Rhode Island, and now lives in Providence with her husband and their children.
After Hood earned her BA in English from the University of Rhode Island, she worked for the now-defunct airline TWA as a flight attendant, living in Boston and Saint Louis and later moving to New York City. She attended graduate school at New York University, studying American Literature.
Hood began writing her first novel Somewhere Off The Coast Of Maine in 1983 while working as a flight attendant — and while attending graduate school —writing whenever she could during train rides to JFK airport or in the galleys of the airplane while passengers slept. During a furlough from the airline, she worked at the Spring Street Bookstore in Soho and Tony Roma's while writing Somewhere Off The Coast Of Maine. Like much of her work, Somewhere Off The Coast Of Maine draws upon her own life. Hood says the book began as a series of short stories about three women who went to college together in the 1960s. A year earlier, her older brother, Skip, died in a freak accident and Hood was struggling with how to cope with the loss. At a writer’s conference, Hood was convinced by the writer Nicholas Delbanco that she was really writing a novel, and from there she began to connect the stories.
In 1987 the novel was published by Bantam Books as one of the launch books for their original paperback series, Bantam New Fiction.