Joseph Skibell Wins Georgia Author of the Year for Fiction

June 30, 2011
Joseph Skibell
photo by Jeffrey Allen

ATLANTA (June 30, 2011)— Joseph Skibell, Associate Professor of Creative Writing and English at Emory University, has won the 47th Georgia Author of the Year Award for Fiction for his novel, A Curable Romantic. 

Georgia Writers Association judge Brian Corrigan states, "A Curable Romantic is equal parts intelligent and witty: a macaronic, picaresque novel that is fabulous in every sense of the word. . . .This is not only the best book of this year's group, it is simply among the best books I've read in the past several years."

The novel begins in 1895 Vienna, where the young hero, Dr. Jakob Josef Sammelsohn, befriends Sigmund Freud and ends in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1940. Skibell's protagonist wanders optimistically through the early 20th century, haunted by the amorous ghost of his young wife.

Skibell's third novel, A Curable Romantic has garnered considerable critical acclaim since its publication in September 2010 by Algonquin Books. Earlier this year, Skibell was the recipient of the $25,000 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature Choice Award.

O Magazine calls A Curable Romantic "an irresistible romp." "This is a brave novel," writes Tony Bailie in the New York Journal of Books, "unafraid to undertake big themes and idea...hugely accomplished."

Fiction writer, playwright, and screenwriter, Joseph Skibell is the recipient of a Halls Fellowship, a Michener Fellowship, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. His first novel, A Blessing on the Moon, was awarded the Rosenthal Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Turner Prize for First Fiction from the Texas Institute of Liberal Arts; and his second novel, The English Disease, received the Jesse H. Jones Award from the Texas Institute of Letters. Skibell is also the author of the play Our Own Dear Anton's Abandoned Story Cycle, which premiered in 2001, as well as many short stories and essays that have appeared in Story, Tikkun, the New York Times and Poets & Writers.

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Creative Writing Program at Emory:The undergraduate Creative Writing Program at Emory celebrates its 21st anniversary this year. Students approach the study of literature through their own creative writing, as well as by the more traditional method of critical analysis and reading. USA Today recently named Emory the number one school for "budding writers." 

Media Contacts

  • Media Contact:
    Jessica Cook
    Senior Editor
    Emory College Center for Creativity & Arts
    jessica.l.cook@emory.edu
    404-727-1687

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