Maxine Chernoff
Maxine Chernoff is an American novelist, writer, poet, academic and literary magazine editor. She was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, and attended the University of Illinois at Chicago.Career
Chernoff is a professor and Chair of the Creative Writing program at San Francisco State University. With her husband, Paul Hoover, she edits the long-running literary journal New American Writing. She is the author of six books of fiction and ten books of poetry, including The Turning and Among the Names, both from Apogee Press.
Chernoff's novel American Heaven and her book of short stories, Some of Her Friends That Year, were finalists for the Bay Area Book Reviewers Award. With Paul Hoover, she has translated The Selected Poems of Friedrich Hölderlin which won the 2009 PEN Translation Prize.
As of 2013, she lives in Mill Valley, California.Works
Novels
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- , a finalist for the Bay Area Book
Reviewers Award
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Short stories
- , a finalist for the Bay Area Book Reviewers Award
- a New York Times Book Review Notable Book for 1993.
- , stories
Poetry
- "Without"
- A House in Summer"
- To Be Read in the Dark"
- The Turning,
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- New Faces of 1952
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- , prose poems
- The Last Aurochs
Editor
- Selected Poems of Friedrich Hölderlin, co-translated with Paul Hoover;
- New American Writing,
Awards
- 1985 Carl Sandburg Award,
- 1985 PEN New Books Award
- 1986 Friends of American Writers' Award
- 1986 LSU Southern Review Fiction Award
- 1993 Sun-Times Fiction Prize
- 1988 CCLM Editors' Award
- 2002 Marin Arts Council Fellowship
- 1996 and 2002 BABRA finalist
- 2009 PEN Translation Award
- 5 Illinois Arts Council Fellowships
- 2013 NEA Poetry Fellowship