Shannon Ravenel


Shannon Ravenel is an American literary editor and co-founder of Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. From 1977 until 1990, she was series editor for the annual anthology The Best American Short Stories; from 1986 until 2006, she was also editor for New Stories from the South.

Early life

Ravenel was born in Charlotte, North Carolina and raised in Charleston, South Carolina as the daughter of Elias Prioleau Ravenel and Harriett Ravenel. In 1956, she entered Hollins College in Virginia as an English major. There, she met Louis D. Rubin, Jr., who became chair of the English Department in her second year there and with whom she would later co-found Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.

Career

Ravenel graduated from Hollins in 1960 and moved to New York, where she found a job as a copywriter for Holt, Rinhart & Winston and a year later relocated to Boston, Massachusetts, where she joined Houghton Mifflin, initially as a secretary to the editorial staff, before eventually becoming an editor of trade books. During her time at Houghton Mifflin, one of the editors whom Ravenel assisted was Martha Foley, who had edited the Best American Short Stories annual anthology since 1941. When Foley died in 1977, the publishing house offered the series to Ted Solotaroff, but while he agreed to edit the 1978 volume, he declined the permanent position, suggesting instead that the publisher use a different editor for each subsequent year.. Houghton Mifflin agreed and asked Ravenel, who by then had moved to St. Louis, to act as series editor, a position she held through the 1990 edition, working with annual editors that included Ann Beattie, John Gardner, Stanley Elkin, John Updike, and Margaret Atwood, among others. In her role, Ravenel read an estimated 1,500 short stories a year in magazines and literary journals, selecting 120 stories to send to the annual editor, who then chose 20 to appear in the volume. In 1990, Ravenel edited a volume on her own, The Best American Short Stories of the Eighties, which collected 20 stories that had appeared in the annual anthology during that decade.

Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill

In 1982, Louis Rubin wrote a letter to Ravenel proposing a new venture. "I am convinced that publishing literary fiction is dying in NYC and it can be done even so... I am therefore toying with the idea of doing it myself." He closed the letter by asking her if she would like to be involved in the enterprise and by fall 1983, the press issued its first titles, including a collection of short stories by Leon Driskell, Passing Through, and a memoir by Vermont C. Royster, My Own, My Country's Time. In 1986, Algonquin began publishing a new annual anthology of short fiction, New Stories from the South, with Ravenel as editor.
In 2001, the press launched an imprint bearing her name, Shannon Ravenel Books. With Algonquin, Ravenel edited books by Larry Brown, Jill McCorkle, Lee Smith, Clyde Edgerton, and Julia Alvarez, among others.