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Judith Freeman

Bio: 
Judith Freeman is a novelist, essayist, critic and short story writer, author of four novels and a collection of short stories. Her novels include The Chinchilla Farm, Set for Life (winner of the Western Heritage Award in 1991), A Desert of Pure Feeling, and most recently, Red Water, named one of the 100 best books of 2002 by the Los Angeles Times. In 1997 Judith received a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in fiction. Her essays, reviews, and stories have appeared in numerous magazines and journals, including The Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post, and The New York Times. She teaches in The Masters of Professional Writing program at the University of Southern California and has been a writer-in-residence at various workshops around the country. She lives in Los Angeles and Idaho.

Judith Freeman: The Latter Days

Judith Freeman
In Conversation With Novelist Michelle Huneven
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
01:08:42
Listen:
Episode Summary

How does one become a writer? For acclaimed novelist Judith Freeman—born the sixth child of eight in a devout Mormon household, married at seventeen, and divorced  at twenty-two with a young child—it was an unlikely path. In her arresting, lyrical memoir set in the patriarchal cloister of Utah in the 1950s and 1960s, she explores the circumstances and choices that informed her course through a thicket of profound difficulties towards becoming. Joined by L.A. native and novelist Michelle Huneven, Freeman visits ALOUD to share her illuminating portrait of resilience and self-discovery.


Participant(s) Bio

Judith Freeman is the author of four novels—Red Water, The Chinchilla Farm, Set for Life, and A Desert of Pure Feeling—and of Family Attractions, a collection of stories, and The Long Embrace, a biography of Raymond Chandler. She lives in California and Idaho.

Michelle Huneven is the author of four novels including Round Rock, and Jamesland, both New York Times Notable Books and finalists for the LA Times Book Award. Her third novel, Blame, was a finalist for both the National Book Critics Circle Award and the LA Times Book Award; and her fourth novel, Off Course, was a New York Times Editor’s Choice. She was the recipient of a GE Younger Writers Award, a Whiting Award for Fiction, and a James Beard award for her work reviewing restaurants for the LA Times, the LA Weekly, and other publications. She has taught at the Iowa Writers Workshop and been a senior fiction editor at the Los Angeles Review of Books. A short story, "Too Good to Be True," was recently published in Harpers. Michelle teaches creative writing at UCLA and lives in Altadena, California, with her husband, dog, cat, and talkative African Gray parrot.


The Long Embrace: Raymond Chandler and the Woman He Loved

In conversation with Denise Hamilton
Thursday, January 10, 2008
01:05:10
Listen:
Episode Summary
In her unconventional biography, Freeman illuminates the psyche and mystery of Chandler and his relationship with his much older wife as well as the City of Angels, to which Chandler's work is forever wed.

Participant(s) Bio
Judith Freeman is a novelist, essayist, critic and short story writer, author of four novels and a collection of short stories. Her novels include The Chinchilla Farm, Set for Life (winner of the Western Heritage Award in 1991), A Desert of Pure Feeling, and most recently, Red Water, named one of the 100 best books of 2002 by the Los Angeles Times. In 1997 Judith received a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in fiction. Her essays, reviews, and stories have appeared in numerous magazines and journals, including The Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post, and The New York Times. She teaches in The Masters of Professional Writing program at the University of Southern California and has been a writer-in-residence at various workshops around the country. She lives in Los Angeles and Idaho.

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