Susan C. Straight
Creative Writing (Professor)
Office: 3620 HMNSS Building
Phone: (909) 787-2008
E-mail: susan.straight@ucr.edu
Susan Straight, professor of creative writing at the University
of California, Riverside, has won the Gold Medal for Fiction
from the San Francisco-based Commonwealth Club for her fifth
novel, "Highwire
Moon." Other literary figures who have won California
Book Awards since 1931 include John Steinbeck, William Saroyan,
Wallace Stegner and Amy Tan. The gold medal comes with a $2,000
prize. Other gold medallists in this year's competition are
Pulitzer Prize winner Alan Taylor for his non-fiction work
"American Colonies" and the poet and Nobel Laureate
Czeslaw Milosz for "New and Collected Poems 1931-2001."
A National Book Award finalist, "Highwire
Moon" details the lives of Serafina, an undocumented
a Mexican-Indian immigrant torn way from her American-born
daughter, Elvia, during an immigration raid. "Highwire
Moon" traces their struggle to reunite despite grinding
poverty, backbreaking toil, the seamy Southern California
subculture of methamphetamine addicts and the foster care
system.
"We are so excited and delighted to feature her in readings
and workshops around Riverside," said Kathryn Morton,
cultural programs coordinator at the library. "She is
internationally known and extraordinarily talented, but she
is also Riverside's own writer and a lifelong supporter of
all this library has to offer. Her topics are directly related
to our city and our people. Her wellspring is Riverside and
she is constantly contributing, in an honest and caring way,
back to all of us."
Straight's other critically acclaimed fiction includes "Aquaboogie,"
"I
Been in Sorrow's Kitchen and Licked Out All the Pots,"
"The Gettin' Place," and "Blacker
Than a Thousand Midnights." She has also written
two children's books, "Bear E. Bear" and "The
Hallway Light at Night." Straight sets all her novels
in the fictional town of Rio Seco, California, a loose parallel
to her hometown, Riverside. Among her awards are the prestigious
Lannan Foundation Award in 1999 and a 1997 Guggenheim Fellowship.
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