Ann Patchett

American author
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Ann Patchett (born December 2, 1963, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) is an American author whose novels often portray the intersecting lives of characters from disparate backgrounds.

Early life and education

When Patchett was six years old, her family moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where she grew up and where she made her home. She obtained a B.A. degree (1984) from Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, New York, and a M.F.A. (1987) from the University of Iowa. Her first work of fiction was published while she was an undergraduate. Patchett later held appointments at colleges and universities, including the position of Tennessee Williams fellow in creative writing at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, in 1997. From the beginning of her career, she won numerous awards for her writing, and in 1994 she received a Guggenheim fellowship.

Early novels

Though she was widely published as a short-story writer and essayist, Patchett became best known for her novels. Her first novel, The Patron Saint of Liars (1992), tells the story of a young pregnant woman who leaves the husband she does not love to travel to a home for unwed mothers. There, as her feelings change and she creates a new family, so do her plans for the future. The novel was adapted as a television movie in 1997. In Taft (1994) John Nickel, the Black manager of a blues bar who is mourning the loss of his son, finds a new family when he hires a young white woman, Fay Taft, and becomes involved in the problems of her brother, Carl. Patchett also wrote a screen adaptation of the novel. The Magician’s Assistant (1997) relates the discoveries of the widow of a gay magician named Parsifal. The woman, who also had been her husband’s assistant, visits the family he had never told her of and learns about his past.

Bel Canto

With her fourth novel, Bel Canto (2001), Patchett established her prominence among contemporary writers. The novel, set somewhere in South America, explores relationships between terrorists and hostages who, shut off from the rest of the world, find unexpected bonds. One of the hostages is a renowned operatic diva, and music becomes the medium by which the characters in the novel communicate. The novel received the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Orange Prize for Fiction (later called the Women’s Prize for Fiction) and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

Later novels and other works

In 2005 Patchett published her first full-length volume of nonfiction writing, Truth and Beauty, a memoir recounting her friendship with the writer Lucy Grealy, who died of a drug overdose in 2002. Patchett returned to fiction with her next book, Run (2007), which explores the relationship between an ambitious father and his two sons. Issues of medical ethics and mortality are the focus of State of Wonder (2011), in which a pharmaceutical researcher travels to the Amazon Rainforest to investigate both the death of a colleague and a scientist’s work on an infertility drug. The Getaway Car: A Practical Memoir About Writing and Life (2011) was a short e-book. Some of Patchett’s previously published essays were collected in This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage (2013).

In 2016 Patchett released the autobiographical Commonwealth, a nonlinear novel about two families dealing with the effects of divorce. Her next novel, The Dutch House (2019), was a fairy tale that follows two siblings who are deserted by their mother and left penniless by their stepmother. The essay collection These Precious Days appeared in 2021. In 2023 she released Tom Lake, a novel centering on a mother and her three adult daughters as they reflect on family dynamics, love and relationships, and growing up.

Parnassus Books

In addition to her writing, Patchett and publisher Karen Hayes opened Parnassus Books in Nashville in 2011; the store expanded to include a traveling book van in 2016.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.