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David Carkeet

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David Carkeet
Born (1946-11-15) November 15, 1946 (age 78)
Sonora, California, U.S.
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • essayist
EducationUniversity of California, Davis (BA)
University of California, Berkeley
University of Wisconsin–Madison (MA)
Indiana University Bloomington (PhD)
Spouse
Barbara Lubin
(m. 1975)
Children3

David Carkeet (born November 15, 1946, Sonora, California) is an American novelist and essayist. Three of his novels have been named The New York Times Book Review Notable Books of the Year.[1]

Biography

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Carkeet grew up in the small northern California town where he was born and attended the University of California at Davis and Berkeley, graduating from the Davis campus with a B.A. degree in German in 1968. He received an M.A. in English literature from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1970 and a Ph.D. in English linguistics from Indiana University Bloomington in 1973. From 1973 to 2002 he taught writing and linguistics at the University of Missouri–St. Louis. He married Barbara Lubin of Elmira, New York, in 1975, and they raised three daughters, Anne, Laurie, and Molly. He has lived in Middlesex, Vermont, since 2003.[2]

Books

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Carkeet has written six novels for adults, two novels for young adults, and one memoir.[3] A comic writer in the vein of Kingsley Amis, David Lodge, and Peter De Vries, he is best known for his three novels featuring a linguist named Jeremy Cook as the protagonist:

  • Double Negative (Dial, 1980),[4] in which Jeremy Cook tries to solve a murder mystery while simultaneously studying language acquisition in toddlers at The Wabash Institute, a southern Indiana daycare center/research facility.
  • The Full Catastrophe (Simon and Schuster, 1990),[5] in which Cook, working for a marriage counseling service known as The Pillow Agency, moves in with a St. Louis couple to study their communication troubles.
  • The Error of Our Ways (Holt, 1997), in this novel Cook comes to grips with the blunders that have defined his life.

Carkeet's other novels treat a range of subjects:

Two of Carkeet's novels are mysteries (Double Negative and From Away), and mystery figures importantly in his two young adult novels, set in the Sierra foothills of his youth - The Silent Treatment[7] and Quiver River (Harper and Row, 1988, 1991).[8][9]

Carkeet's novel The Full Catastrophe has been adapted for the stage by Michael Weller. The play premiered in 2015 at the Contemporary American Theater Festival.

Memoir

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Carkeet's memoir, Campus Sexpot (University of Georgia Press, 2005), tells of the impact on his life made by a 1961 novel of the same name written by a former English teacher at his high school. In it, a busty co-ed seduces her English instructor. Carkeet's Campus Sexpot also details the impact the book had on Sonora, California, where he grew up. The town in which the original novel is set, the fictional burg of Wattsville, sounds much like Sonora, and some of the characters' names are virtually identical to the names of actual Sonorans. Carkeet's Campus Sexpot has generated some controversy, with some of the original author's descendants objecting to Carkeet's portrayal of him.[10] In addition to inspiring Carkeet's memoir, the original novel generated a fictional sequel, From Roundheel To Revolutionary: Linda Franklin After Campus Sexpot, by Jeff Daiell.

Plays

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Carkeet has adapted selected Mark Twain works into stage plays--"Buck Fanshaw's Funeral," "Cannibalism in the Cars," "The McWilliamses and the Burglar Alarm," and others. They have had several staged readings and productions in the U.S. and in France.[11][12]

Short works

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Carkeet has written some three dozen general interest essays for The Village Voice, The New York Times Magazine, Smithsonian, Poets & Writers, The Oxford American, and the online journals Salon and The Morning News. In the 1990s he was a regular columnist for St. Louis magazine. His short stories have appeared in North American Review, Kansas Quarterly, and Carolina Quarterly. His critical and scholarly production includes an often-cited analysis of the dialects in Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn[13][14]

Honors

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In 1981, Carkeet was nominated for an Edgar Award in the first-novel category by the Mystery Writers of America for Double Negative, published the year before.[15] He won an O. Henry Award in 1982 for "The Greatest Slump of All Time," a short story originally published in Carolina Quarterly that he later expanded into the novel of the same title.[16] He received a creative writing fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1983,[17] and he won the Creative Nonfiction Award from the Association of Writers & Writing Programs in 2004.[18]

References

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  1. ^ Routledge (2003). International Who's Who of Authors and Writers. Psychology Press. p. 92. ISBN 9781857431797.
  2. ^ "Directory of Writers; Poets & Writers". Pw.org. 2011. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  3. ^ "WorldCat catalogue". Worldcat.org. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  4. ^ Carkeet, David (23 February 2010). Double Negative - David Carkeet - Google Books. Overlook. ISBN 9781590205464. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  5. ^ Carkeet, David (27 July 2010). The Full Catastrophe - David Carkeet - Google Books. Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 9781590203408. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  6. ^ Carkeet, David (1987). I Been There Before - David Carkeet - Google Books. Penguin. ISBN 9780140094220. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  7. ^ Carkeet, David (October 1990). The Silent Treatment - David Carkeet - Google Books. HarperCollins Canada, Limited. ISBN 9780064470148. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  8. ^ Carkeet, David (1991). Quiver River - David Carkeet - Google Books. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780060224547. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  9. ^ Something About the Author, Gale, 1994, vol. 75, pp. 21-22. Worldcat.org. OCLC 705262513. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  10. ^ "Campus Sexpot". Inside Higher Ed. 2005-11-03. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  11. ^ "New Play Exchange".
  12. ^ "Broadway World".
  13. ^ Cattell, Jaques (1982). Dictionary of American Scholars. Bowker, 1982, volume 2, page 107. Science Press. ISBN 9780835214766. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  14. ^ Lemaster, J. R.; Wilson, James Darrell; Hamric, Christie Graves (1993). The Mark Twain Encyclopedia Routledge, 1993, pages 219-220. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780824072124. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  15. ^ "Edgars Database". Theedgars.com. Archived from the original on 2018-09-27. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  16. ^ "Bold Type: O. Henry Award Winners 1919-2000". Randomhouse.com. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  17. ^ "NEA Literature Fellowships: 40 Years of Supporting Writers" (PDF). Nea.gov. p. 16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-06-12. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  18. ^ "Association of Writers & Writing Programs". Awpwriter.org. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
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