Miriam Karmel

Miriam Karmel is an American novelist and writer. Her first novel, Being Esther (2013), is one of only a few involving characters in their eighties.[1]

Karmel's writing has appeared in numerous publications including Bellevue Literary Review, The Talking Stick, Pearl, Dust & Fire, Passager, Jewish Women's Literary Annual, and Water~Stone Review. She is the recipient of Minnesota Monthly's 2002 Tamarack Award, the Kate Braverman Short Story Prize, and the Arthur Edelstein Prize for Short Fiction. Her story The King of Marvin Gardens was anthologized in Milkweed Editions' Fiction on a Stick .[2]

Life

Karmel was born in Chicago, Illinois. She earned a degree in history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, a master's in American labor history from the University of Rochester, and a master's in journalism from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill that launched her journalism career. She moved to Minnesota in 1978.[3]

Being Esther

Karmel's first novel Being Esther was published in 2013 by Milkweed Editions. It concerns an 85-year-old widow, Esther Lustig, who suddenly finds herself elderly and in the midst of a pushed-transition to an assisted-living facility she refers to as 'Bingoville'. The novel moves in and out of time, and suggests looking more closely at those who 'have more to share than we think.'[4]

Short Fiction

In 2009 Karmel's short story Happy Chicken won the Carol Bly Short Story Contest, sponsored by Writers Rising Up, an Eden Prairie-based environmental nonprofit.[5] In 2017 Miriam Karmel's collection Subtle Variations and Other Stories (being published in October) won the inaugural Holy Cow! Press First Fiction Award, winning a $5,000 cash prize.[6]

References

  1. "Being Esther". MinnPost. Retrieved 2017-07-30.
  2. "Miriam Karmel". JewishBookCouncil. Retrieved 2017-07-30.
  3. "Two Twin Cities Authors Have Never Met But Share A Common Bond". TwinCitiesPioneerPress. Retrieved 2017-08-07.
  4. "Being Esther". HazelandWren. Retrieved 2017-07-30.
  5. "Happy Chicken Award". MinnPost. Retrieved 2017-08-07.
  6. "First Fiction Award". Twin Cities PioneerPress. Retrieved 2017-07-30.
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