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BiographyGordon Jay Lish (born February 11, 1934 in Hewlett, New York) is an American writer. As a literary editor, he championed many American authors, particularly Raymond Carver, Barry Hannah, Amy Hempel, and Richard Ford. He is a father of four (Jennifer, Rebecca, Ethan, and Atticus), and a grandfather of six (Anne, and Carla, children of Jennifer; Pearl and Ezra, children of Rebecca; and Nina and Isaac, children of Ethan). HistoryFrom 1986 to 1996, Gordon Lish was founder and editor of The Quarterly, Vintage Books, thereafter the Rosenkranz Foundation. He was an editor at Alfred A. Knopf from 1977 to 1995. He was fiction editor of Esquire from 1969 to 1977. In the ‘60s, he was the editor and founder of the literary magazines The Chrysalis Review and Genesis West, the latter of which associated itself with the fiction of Ken Kesey, the marvels of Neal Cassady, and the poetry of Jack Gilbert. He is the author of the novels Dear Mr. Capote, Peru, Extravaganza, My Romance, Zimzum, Epigraph, and Mourner at the Door, Selected Stories, Self-Imitation of Myself, Sounds in American Fiction, The Secret Life of Our Times: with an introduction by Tom Wolfe, and All Our Secrets Are the Same. While director of linguistic studies at Behavioral Research Laboratories, of Palo Alto, Lish produced English Grammar and Why Work, this latter for the Office of Economic Opportunity; he was thereafter attached to Educational Development Corporation, also of Palo Alto, where he produced A Man’s Work for McGraw-Hill. Lish has taught imaginative writing at Yale, Columbia, and New York University, and is known for his many years of presenting private class, each session of which was six to ten and a half hours in duration. Lish was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1984. Lish’s fictions have been anthologized in such standards as Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards, and Pushcart Prize, and he has contributed essays on Jewish matters to the books Congregation (HBJ) and Testimony (Times Books). Lish is thought to be a figure of controversy; his activities—as teacher, writer, editor, publisher—have been the subject of scores of newspaper and magazine articles, of television appearances, and, in the early ‘90s, of a litigation wherein he opposed Harper’s on a question of copyright infringement, and prevailed. He is generally described as our foremost teacher of creative writing, and in respect of his latest book, Kirkus said “Lish is our Joyce, our Beckett, our truest modernist”). His papers are collected by the Lilly Library, at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. In August of 1993 he was awarded an honorary Litt. D. by the State University of New York. Lish was elected to the Century Association in 1985, but not long thereafter resigned his membership. In November of 1994, Le Nouvel Observateur cited Lish as “one of the one hundred major writers of our time.” While at Esquire, Lish championed the work of Don DeLillo (to the publication of whose first play, The Engineer of Moonlight, Lish contributed an afterword), Cynthia Ozick, Harold Brodkey, Barry Hannah, Joy Williams, and Raymond Carver, and brought out, while at Knopf, books by Denis Donoghue, Jack Gilbert, Mary Robison, Amy Hempel, Raymond Carver, Janet Kauffman, David Sudnow, Frederick Busch, Patricia Lear, Sheila Kohler, Barry Hannah, Lily Tuck, Sam Michel, Noy Holland, Gary Lutz, Jason Schwartz, Dawn Raffel, Anne Carson, William Ferguson, Raymond Kennedy, Thomas Lynch, Ben Marcus, Brian Evenson, Nancy Lemann, William Tester, Peter Christopher, Leon Rooke, Paulette Jiles, Anderson Ferrell, Greg Mulcahy, Douglas Glover, Mark Richard, Victoria Redel, Bruce McCall, Hob Broun, John S. P. Walker, Yannick Murphy, Thomas Glynn, Ann Pyne, Ted Pejovich, Walter Kirn, Jennifer Allen, Christine Schutt, Michael Martone, Bette Howland, Roy Blount, Chaim Grade, Bette Pesetsky, Michael Hickins, Robert Plunket, Ken Sparling, Diane Williams, and Rudy Wilson. Lish also published, as Gordon Lish A Book for McGraw-Hill, Raymond Carver’s first collection of stories, "Will Your Please Be Quiet, Please". Lish was famously fired from his job (see "A Life Decoded", by J. Craig Venter, Viking, 2007, and “The Man Who Taught Too Well,” The Nation, an article by Donovan Bess, June 15, 1963) as a teacher of English at Mills High School, in Millbrae, California. Before taking up teaching, Lish worked, in radio, at stations KPDN, WELI, and WVNJ. He married Frances Fokes in 1956, in Tucson, Arizona (children: Jennifer, Rebecca, Ethan), and wed, in 1969, in Carmel, California, Barbara Works (one child: Atticus). Barbara Lish succumbed to amiotropic lateral sclerosis in September of 1994. For some years Lish ghostwrote a variety of books (for example, Coming Out of the Ice, by Victor Herman, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich) and produced, under various pseudonyms, other titles of fiction and non-fiction. It is believed he is the author of a book called The Psoriasis Diet, by Jackman Gillette. Lish has six grandchildren and lives in New York City. Lish was interviewed on The Dick Cavett Show in 1991. In February 1977, Esquire ran the unsigned fiction “For Rupert—With No Promises,” written, it was widely thought, by J. D. Salinger. It was later revealed, in a front-page story in The Wall Street Journal, that it was Lish—not Cheever or Updike, as insiders had speculated—who was responsible for the hoax. Lish is said to have perpetrated other hoaxes along this line. The press—most prominently The New Yorker and The New York Times—has made much of Lish’s participation in the composition of Raymond Carver’s short stories. Lish was born, in Hewlett, New York, in 1934, and attended Phillips Academy, Andover (dismissed without diploma), and was graduated from the University of Arizona, in 1959, with honors in English and German, and thereafter attained a secondary-school teaching credential at San Francisco State College. Lish is the source of the information that he was fired from every job he ever had. No few of Lish’s students have gone on to notable careers in writing and teaching. Lish is the son of Philip and Regina Lish. Select English bibliography
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