Colson Whitehead

  • male
More Details for Colson Whitehead:
  • Colson Whitehead image 1
  • Colson Whitehead image 2
  • Colson Whitehead image 3
  • Colson Whitehead image 4
  • Colson Whitehead image 5
Description:
Colson Whitehead (full name Arch Colson Chipp Whitehead) is a New York-based novelist. In 2002, he received a MacArthur Fellowship, often referred to as the MacArthur "Genius" grant. He was born in New York City in 1969, attended the Trinity School in New York, and graduated from Harvard College in 1991. He is a journalist whose work has appeared in numerous publications, including "The New York Times", "Salon" and "The Village Voice". Wikipedia
Born:
1969
Related Searches:

News About Colson Whitehead See more news

Websites About Colson Whitehead

  • Colson Whitehead

    ... To Send A Gift Posted by Colson Whitehead, 11/12/07 October 15, 2007 The Industry Has Changed So Much, But Theres Still a Lot of Money To Be Made in Ancillary Posted by Colson Whitehead, ...
    www.colsonwhitehead.com
  • Wikipedia

    The definitive Wikipedia entry for Colson Whitehead. Wikipedia is the biggest multilingual free-content encyclopedia on the Internet.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colson_Whitehead
  • Colson Whitehead

    ... To Send A Gift Posted by Colson Whitehead, 11/12/07 October 15, 2007 The Industry Has Changed So Much, But Theres Still a Lot of Money To Be Made in Ancillary Posted by Colson Whitehead, ...
    www.colsonwhitehead.com/
  • The Bat Segundo Show Blog...

    Author: Colson Whitehead Condition of Mr. Segundo: Dismayed by advertising jingle trios and interruptions; more than vaguely litigious.
    www.edrants.com/segundo/?p=66
  • On Point : Whats in a Name?...

    By host Tom Ashbrook: Four books into a still-young career, novelist Colson Whitehead has had the prizes and accolades young writers dream of.
    www.onpointradio.org/shows/2006/09/20060904_b_main.asp
  • The Bat Segundo Show #48:...

    […] Book #55 was a reread of Colson Whitehead ’s The Intuitionist. I had read this book at the turn of the century, which seemed fitting given this novel’s preoccupation with the 20th, and marveled then at how Whitehead’s use of language served as a skel
    www.edrants.com/segundo/?p=66

Directory