Nicole Krauss
Award-winning Author
Marshall Scholar, Class of 1996 (University of Oxford)
"I’m really interested in characters and situations where we have to live with paradox. I’m interested in tensions but not in resolving those tensions… That interests me, because I think that’s where most of us live.”
-Nicole krauss
a contemporary master
Nicole Krauss has been called “one of American’s most important novelists and an international literary sensation” by the New York Times and “one of American’s greatest writers” by the Financial Times. She is the author of the international bestsellers, Forest Dark, Great House (a finalist for the National Book Award and the Orange Prize) and The History of Love, which won the Saroyan Prize for International Literature and France’s Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger, and was short-listed for the Orange, Médicis, and Femina prizes. Her first novel, Man Walks Into a Room, was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book of the Year. Her short stories have been published in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Harper’s, Esquire, and Best American Short Stories, and were collected in To Be a Man, which received the Wingate Award. She was the inaugural Writer-in-Residence at the Zuckerman Mind, Brain and Behavior Institute at Columbia University, and has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Academy in Berlin, and the Cullman Center at the New York Public Library. Her books have been translated into 38 languages.