Daniel Stern (1928–2007) was an American novelist and scholar. Raised in New York City, he was an accomplished cellist and promising composer before he began his writing career. After graduating from the High School of Music and Art in New York, he earned positions with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the Houston Symphony and played with renowned jazz musician Charlie Parker. He also served as the vice president of major media companies including Warner Bros. and CBS. In addition to publishing nine novels and three collections of short fiction, Stern also served as the editor of Hampton Shorts. As an author, Stern is celebrated for his explorations of post–World War II Jewish-American life; his novels’ formal experimentation; and, in the short-story genre, his innovation of the “twice-told tale.”
His writing won many awards throughout his career, including the International Prix du Souvenir from the Bergen Belsen Society and the French government; the Rosenthal Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; two Pushcart Prizes; two O. Henry Awards; and the honor of publication in The Best American Short Stories. In addition to serving on the faculty of the University of Houston’s creative writing program, he taught at Wesleyan, Pace, New York, and Harvard Universities.
Daniel Stern (1928–2007) was an American novelist and scholar. Raised in New York City, he was an accomplished cellist and promising composer before he began his writing career. After graduating from the High School of Music and Art in New York, he earned positions with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the Houston Symphony and played with renowned jazz musician Charlie Parker. He also served as the vice president of major media companies including Warner Bros. and CBS. In addition to publishing nine novels and three collections of short fiction, Stern also served as the editor of Hampton Shorts. As an author, Stern is celebrated for his explorations of post–World War II Jewish-American life; his novels’ formal experimentation; and, in the short-story genre, his innovation of the “twice-told tale.”
His writing won many awards throughout his career, including the International Prix du Souvenir from the Bergen Belsen Society and the French government; the Rosenthal Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; two Pushcart Prizes; two O. Henry Awards; and the honor of publication in The Best American Short Stories. In addition to serving on the faculty of the University of Houston’s creative writing program, he taught at Wesleyan, Pace, New York, and Harvard Universities.
The Suicide Academy: A Novel
by Daniel Stern
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9781480444201
- Publisher: Open Road Media
- Publication date: 09/24/2013
- Sold by: Barnes & Noble
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 173
- File size: 1 MB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
- Share
- LendMe LendMe™ Learn More
A dark and beautiful tale of a most unusual school
Wolf Walker is the director of the Suicide Academy. Troubled individuals come to his school for just one day and must decide whether to end their lives. As for Wolf himself, he is suffering a kind of death-in-life. The Academy’s board members have involved him in a policy skirmish, and the depressed employee he had an affair with is not getting any better. When his ex-wife, Jewel, and her husband come on the scene, ostensibly to make a film about the Academy, he is racked by old jealousies—and he also wonders, might she secretly be checking in?
Packed with meaning, The Suicide Academy is a gripping existential parable about souls adrift in modern life.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Miss America: A Novel
- by Daniel Stern
-
- An Urban Affair: A Novel
- by Daniel Stern
-
- George Mills
- by Stanley Elkin
-
- After the War: A Novel
- by Daniel Stern
-
- The Franchiser
- by Stanley Elkin
-
- The Deer at the River: A Novel
- by Joseph Caldwell
-
- Crucial Conversations: A Novel
- by May Sarton
-
- The Collected Stories of…
- by Hortense Calisher
-
- The Darkroom of Damocles: A…
- by Willem Frederik Hermans
-
- An Honorable Profession: A…
- by John L'Heureux
-
- Wolf at the Door: A Novel
- by John Yount
-
- Sweet William: A Novel
- by Beryl Bainbridge
-
- Moving the Palace
- by Charif MajdalaniEdward Gauvin
-
- Life Goes On
- by Alan Sillitoe
-
- Marry or Burn
- by Valerie Trueblood
-
- Faithful Are the Wounds: A…
- by May Sarton
-
- October Ferry to Gabriola: A…
- by Malcolm Lowry