Anne Roiphe | |
---|---|
Born | Anne Roth December 25, 1935 New York City |
Occupation | Novelist, Non-fiction writer, Essayist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1967— |
Notable works | Up The Sandbox (1970), Fruitful: A Memoir (1996) |
Spouse |
Jack Richardson Dr. Herman Roiphe |
Anne Roiphe (born December 25, 1935) is an American writer and journalist. She is best known as a first-generation feminist, and author of the novel Up The Sandbox (1970), which was filmed as a starring vehicle for Barbra Streisand in 1972. In 1996, Salon called the book "a feminist classic."
Roiphe is Jewish and was born and raised in New York City. She graduated from the Brearley School in 1953, and received her B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College in 1957.
Over a four-decade career, Roiphe has proven so prolific that the critic Sally Eckhoff observed, "tracing Anne Roiphe's career often feels like following somebody through a revolving door: the requirements of keeping the pace can be trying." (Eckhoff described the writer as "a free-thinking welter of contradictions, a never-say-die feminist who's absolutely nuts about children"). Roiphe published her first novel, Digging Out, in 1967. Her second, Up The Sandbox (1970), became a national best-seller and made the author's career.
Roiphe has since published seven novels and two memoirs, while contributing essays and reviews to The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, New York Magazine, and others. In 1993, The New York Times described her as "a writer who has never toed a party line, feminist or otherwise." Her 1996 memoir Fruitful: A memoir of Modem Motherhood was nominated for the National Book Award.
From 1997 to 2002, she served as a columnist for The New York Observer. Her memoir Epilogue was published in 2008, and another memoir, Art and Madness, in 2011. Her most recent book, Ballad of the Black and Blue Mind, was published by Seven Stories Press in May 2015, and received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and BookList.