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Michael Brodsky

American writer


Summary

American writer

FieldValue
birth_date
birth_placeNew York City, United States
occupationNovelist, Editor
notableworksXman,
*****
movementPostmodernism
nationalityAmerican
website

Michael Mark Brodsky (born Aug 2, 1948) is a scientific/medical editor, novelist, playwright, and short story writer. He is best known for his novels Xman and *****, as well as for his translation of Samuel Beckett's Eleuthéria.

Early life and education

Michael Brodsky was born in New York City, the son of Martin and Marian Brodsky. He attended the Bronx High School of Science. He received a 1969 BA from Columbia College, Columbia University, taught math and science in New York for a year, attended Case Western Reserve University medical school for two years, then taught French and English in Cleveland until 1975.

Brodsky returned to New York City in 1976, working as an editor for the Institute for Research on Rheumatic Diseases. He married Laurence Lacoste. They are the parents of two children, Joseph Matthew and Matthew Daniel. From 1985 to 1991, Brodsky was an editor with Springer-Verlag. After 1991, he was with the United Nations.

Brodsky lives on Roosevelt Island.

Bibliography

Novels

  • Detour, 1978
  • Circuits, 1983
  • Xman, Four Walls Eight Windows, 1987
  • Dyad, Four Walls Eight Windows, 1989
  • *****, Four Walls Eight Windows, 1994
  • We Can Report Them, Four Walls Eight Windows, 1999
  • Lurianics, Gray Oak Books, 2013
  • Invidicum, Tough Poets Press, 2023

Short stories

  • Wedding Feast, 1981
  • Project, 1982
  • X in Paris, 1988
  • Three Goat Songs, 1991
  • Southernmost, 1996
  • Limit Point, 2007

Plays

  • Terrible Sunlight, 1980
  • Packet Piece, 1982
  • No Packet Piece, 1982
  • Dose Center, 1990
  • Night of the Chair, 1990
  • Six Scenes: A Barracks Brawl, 1994
  • The Anti-Muse, reading 1996, performance 2000

Translation

  • Eleuthéria, by Samuel Beckett, written 1947, suppressed, published 1995

Nonfiction

  • "Svevo: The Artist as Analyzand", Review of Existential Psychology and Psychiatry, 15 no. 2-3 (1977), pp 112–133.
  • "Toward the Plane of the Sacred: Hafftka’s Great Chain of Being" essay in the catalogue for Michael Hafftka "A Retrospective: Large Oils 1985-2003" (2004).

References

CANRS refers to Contemporary Authors New Revision Series, and DLB refers to Dictionary of Literary Biography. Full citations are above.

References

  1. This is taken from ''World Authors, 1995-2000'', ''CANRS'' 147, ''DLB'' 244. Brodsky's first two books give his birth year as 1951, later books give 1948.
  2. See also ''CANRS'' 147 and ''DLB'' 244, cited above.
  3. ''Detour'', author information
  4. 11/28/1976, as given in ''DLB'' 244 and ''CANRS'' 147
  5. all other information, these two paragraphs, is from ''World Authors 1995-2000'' or ''DLB'' 244 or ''CANRS'' 147
  6. ''CANRS'' 147, and [http://www.zeek.net/804fiction/ Zeek magazine].
  7. Hafftka was the illustrator (cover and some internal) for Brodsky's early fiction, and later for [[Limit Point]].
Wikipedia Source

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