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Janet Burroway

Janet Burroway
Born (1936-09-21) September 21, 1936 (age 80)
Tucson, Arizona
Occupation Writer
Nationality American
Genre fiction
poetry
plays
Notable works Writing Fiction: A Guide to Narrative Craft
The Buzzards
Raw Silk
Spouse Peter Ruppert
Children Timothy Alan Eysselinck
Tobyn Alexander (Alex) Eysselinck
Website
janetburroway.com

Janet Burroway (born September 21, 1936) is an American author.

Burroway was born in Tucson, Arizona, and educated at the University of Arizona, Barnard College in New York, Cambridge University in England, and the Yale School of Drama. Burroway’s published oeuvre includes eight novels, memoirs, short stories, poems, translations, plays, two children’s books, and two how-to books about the craft of writing. Her novel The Buzzards was nominated for the 1970 Pulitzer Prize. Raw Silk is her most acclaimed novel thus far. While Burroway’s literary fame is due to her novels, the book that has won her the widest readership is Writing Fiction: A Guide to Narrative Craft, first published in 1982. Now in its 9th edition, the book is used as a textbook in writing programs throughout the United States.

The second child and only daughter of tool and die worker Paul Burroway and his wife Alma (née Milner), Janet Burroway was educated in Phoenix. Burroway’s intelligence and gift for words resulted in one of her elementary school teachers tutoring her in poetry after class.

Her first scholarships were courtesy of local men’s clubs, the Elks and the Knights of Pythias, and allowed her to attend the University of Arizona. After studying there for a year (1954–55), Burroway won the Mademoiselle Magazine College Board Contest and spent part of the summer of 1955 in New York City as the magazine’s Guest Editor.

Burroway’s first poem to be published in a national magazine was “The Rivals,” which appeared in Seventeen when Burroway herself was eighteen (June 1954). In 1955, her first play, Garden Party, was produced at Barnard College. Seventeen also published Burroway’s first short story, “I Do Not Love You, Wesley,” in January 1957. In August of that same year, The Atlantic published Burroway’s poem “Song.”

After receiving her M. A. from Cambridge, Burroway taught at the University of Sussex from 1965-1970.

Burroway married Belgian theatre director Walter Eysselinck and lived in Belgium for two years where she worked as a costume designer. The couple’s oldest son, Timothy Alan Eysselinck, was born in Ghent in 1964. After Eysselinck took a theatre job in Sussex, the family moved to England, where Burroway had their second child in 1966. She left Eysselinck in 1971.

She married William Dean Humphries, an artist, in 1978, but the marriage did not last. The two divorced in 1981.


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