Aimee Parkison

Aimee Parkison is an award-winning short story writer and novelist. She has taught creative writing at a number of universities, including Cornell University, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, and Oklahoma State University.

Biography

Parkison earned her Bachelor of Arts in English Language and Literature/Letters from Oklahoma State University in 2000, where she was Art Editor and Fiction Editor of Papyrus, the undergraduate literary magazine. She earned her Master of Fine Arts from Cornell University in 2002, and taught there as a lecturer of Creative Writing from September 2002 to May 2004.

Parkison worked as an Associate Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte,[1] where she taught Creative Writing, including fiction, poetry, and screenwriting. Parkison was the Creative Writing Coordinator of the English Department the faculty sponsor and chapter adviser for the UNC-C Sigma Tau Delta, Beta Sigma Chapter.

Parkison became an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing-Fiction at Oklahoma State University in May 2014.

Fiction

Winner of the first annual Starcherone Fiction Prize, Parkison is the author of two short story collections and one novel. Parkison’s prose and poetry have appeared in literary magazines, anthologies, and academic journals. Her short story collection, Woman With the Dark Horses (2004), was selected by Cris Mazza for the first annual Starcherone Prize.[2] Parkison's second short story collection, The Innocent Party, was published by BOA Editions[3] in 2012.

She was awarded a North Carolina Arts Council Fellowship[4] in Prose Writing and a Hearst Fellowship from the American Antiquarian Society[5] Her most recent short poetic novel called The Petals of Your Eyes, about kidnapped girls who become actors in a secret theater was published in May 2014.

Parkison regularly holds fiction readings and writing workshops at colleges throughout the country. She will also participate in the Association of Writers & Writing Programs Conference Association of Writers & Writing Programs 2014 in Seattle. As part of the Women Writing Violence panel, she will discuss how today’s literature often ignores the trend of "Women Writing Violence." She is now working on a new story collection, a screenplay, and a historical novel.

She has received a Christopher Isherwood Fellowship,[6] a Writers at Work Fellowship, and a Kurt Vonnegut Fiction Prize [7] from the North American Review, the oldest literary magazine in the US.[8]

Her primary areas of interest include fiction writing, creative nonfiction, screenwriting and film studies and women’s studies. She currently is working on a new story collection, a screenplay, and a historical novel.

Reviews

In addition to fiction writing, Parkison has written a review titled "All the Pretty Things;" an evaluation of The Beautiful Anthology that appeared in the American Book Review. Vol. 33, No. 5: 20.

Books

Awards and Distinctions

References

  1. http://clas-pages.uncc.edu/aimee-parkison
  2. "Previous Winners". Starcherone Books.
  3. http://www.boaeditions.org/authors/Aimee-Parkison
  4. "Individual Artist: Aimee Parkison: Literature Fiction". North Carolina Arts Council.
  5. https://www.americanantiquarian.org/pastartistfellows.htm
  6. https://www.awpwriter.org/community_calendar/user_view/18337/parkison_aimee
  7. "Kurt Vonnegut Prize Winners". 2004 Winner; Warnings. North American Review.
  8. "North American Review". North American Review.
  9. "Kurt Vonnegut Fiction Prize Winners". 2004 Winner: Warnings by Aimee Parkison. North American Review.
  10. Parkison, Aimee (May–August 2004). "Warnings". North American Review. May–August 2004: 3–8.
  11. Parkison, Aimee. "Warnings". North American Review. May–August 2004: 3–8.
  12. 1 2 3 "Aimee Parkison Literature Fiction Writing". North Carolina Arts Council.
  13. "Starcherone Books".
  14. "Aimee Parkison". Web Del Sol Chapbook Series. Web Del Sol.
  15. "Crab Orchard Review's Annual Literary Contests". "The Upstairs Album' 2001 Winner citation. Southern Illinois University Carbondale.
  16. "Present and Former Creative and Performing Artist and Writer Fellows". 2013 Fellowship Winner. American Antiquarian Society, AAS.
  17. "Aimee Parkison: Literature Fiction Writing". North Carolina Arts Council.
  18. Moore, Rebecca. "Three Charlotte Area Artists Receive NC Arts Council Fellowship". North Carolina Arts Council.
  19. "Aimee Parkison: Literature Fiction Writing Fellowship". North Carolina Arts Council.
  20. "The Christopher Isherwood Foundation: www.isherwoodfoundation.org" (PDF). Grant Recipients: Fellowship Winners 2005. Isherwood Foundation.
  21. "Association of Carolina Emerging Scholars". University of South Carolina.

External links

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