Farnoosh Moshiri

Farnoosh Moshiri

Moshiri in her home in Houston, Texas
Born (1951-07-14)July 14, 1951
Tehran, Iran
Occupation Novelist, playwright, librettist, and professor of literature and creative writing
Website
www.farnooshmoshiri.net

Farnoosh Moshiri is an Iranian-born novelist, playwright, and librettist. She teaches creative writing and literature at University of Houston–Downtown. Moshiri has published five books of fiction: At the Wall of the Almighty (Interlink, 1999), The Bathhouse (Black Heron Press, 2001, Beacon Press, 2002), The Crazy Dervish and the Pomegranate Tree (Black Heron Press, 2004), Against Gravity (Penguin, 2006), and The Drum Tower (Black Heron Press and Sandstone Press {U.K}, 2014).[1]

Among other grants, fellowships, and literary awards, Moshiri is the recipient of Barthelme Memorial Award, C. Glenn Cambor/Inprint Fellowship: Presented by Inprint, Inc., Two Barbara Deming Awards (a grant for feminist writers whose work speaks of peace and social justice, two consecutive Black Heron Awards for Social Fiction,[2] and Valiente (courage) Award from Voices Breaking Boundaries for artists who have taken risks to speak out and act as advocates. Her third novel, Against Gravity, was chosen by Barnes and Noble for Discover New Writer Series and by Borders Books in Original Voices selections.[3]

Moshiri has spoken about her work and writing in exile at Columbia University, West Carolina University, Syracuse University, Bronx Community College, University of Houston Campuses, Rice University, Lone Star College Campuses, Houston Community College Campuses, San Jacinto College, University of the Incarnate Word (San Antonio), Asia Society, AWP Conference, Voices Breaking Boundaries, and more.

In 2012, in collaboration with the composer, Gregory Spears, she created a chamber opera by the name of "The Bricklayer" commissioned by the Houston Grand opera. The world premier was on March 16, 2012.

Moshiri has been a professor of literature, drama, and creative writing in College of Dramatic Arts of Tehran, Houston Community College, Lone Star College, Kabul University, Syracuse University, and the University of Houston–Downtown. She lives and writes in Houston.[1]

Early life and education

Moshiri grew up in a literary family. Her uncle, Fereydoon Moshiri was one of the most prominent and popular poets of Iran. Moshiri wrote fiction and poetry since she was a child. Her first short story was published in "Sokhan" (one the prestigious literary periodicals of pre-revolutionary Iran) when she was eighteen-years old. She was also a ballet dancer and a member of the National Iranian Ballet Company, where she danced in major classical ballet performances in the 60s and the early 70s. Moshiri left the ballet company to study playwriting at the College of Dramatic Arts. During the 70s, she wrote plays and short stories and went onstage as actress. In 1977, with a scholarship, she entered the graduate studies of drama at the University of Iowa. In 1979, after receiving master's degree in dramatic literature, she returned to Iran to teach at the College of Dramatic Arts. In this period, she wrote plays and short stories, and published translated literature from English to Farsi. In 1983, the rehearsals of her full-length play were interrupted by the guards and the director and actors were arrested. She was purged from her job as a professor and a dramaturg and had no way other than exile. She left the country on foot, living in the refugee camps of Afghanistan and India. In the summer of 1986 she received right of asylum from the U.S. and a few months later entered the graduate program of creative writing at the University of Houston, where she received MFA in Fiction. She published novels and stories, taught literature, and held fiction workshops for the decades to come.[1]

Works

Novels

Story collections

Opera

Short stories in anthologies

Foreign language translations

Awards and reviews

Awards won

Reviews and literary criticism

By Heidi Waleson. March 20, 2012.[21]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Iranian-born writer, at home in Houston, again raises her voice".
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Awards – blackheronpress.com".
  3. Noble, Barnes &. "B&N Discover Great New Writers, Middle Eastern Fiction, World Fiction".
  4. https://www.houstongrandopera.org/globalassets/publications-media--news-items/press-releases/hgo-bricklayer-final.pdf
  5. "Coloring Book". December 1, 2003.
  6. "At the Shepherd's".
  7. "Lost Horse Press - an Independent Literary Publisher".
  8. 1 2 http://demingfund.org/recent-grantees-pd-20.php
  9. Humanities, University of Central Florida, College of Arts and. "UCF: English: The Florida Review: Issues".
  10. "::VBB:: Past Seasons".
  11. "Student Competitions".
  12. "Review of The Drum Tower".
  13. http://www.ebookwoman.com/event/reading-signing-farnoosh-moshiri-0
  14. "THE DRUM TOWER by Farnoosh Moshiri - Kirkus Reviews".
  15. "Fiction Book Review: The Drum Tower by Farnoosh Moshiri. Black Heron (www.blackheronpress.com), $25.95 (307p) ISBN 978-1-936364-06-0".
  16. "The Drum Tower".
  17. "Book Recommendation: "The Drum Tower" by Farnoosh Moshiri - One Day Perhaps I'll Know".
  18. Caruba, Alan (December 1, 2014). "Bookviews by Alan Caruba: Bookviews - December 2014".
  19. Moaveni, Review by Azadeh (December 5, 2014). "'The Last Illusion', by Porochista Khakpour; 'The Drum Tower', by Farnoosh Moshiri" via Financial Times.
  20. "MBR: Reviewer's Bookwatch, January 2015".
  21. Waleson, Heidi (March 19, 2012). "A Glimpse Behind the Wall" via Wall Street Journal.
  22. "'The Bricklayer' Details Iranian Exile Experience on Stage".
  23. "East + West premiere: Houston Grand Opera's The Bricklayer leaves audiences wanting more".
  24. "Republics of the Imagination".
  25. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/books/review/fiction-chronicle.html
  26. Atwood, Margaret (September 4, 2004). "Moving Targets: Writing with Intent 1982 - 2004". House of Anansi via Google Books.
  27. "Book Review: 'The Bathhouse'".
  28. ""The Other Iran" by Gloria Emerson, The Nation, Monday, June 16th, 2003".
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.