Julie Orringer

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Julie Orringer is the author of The Invisible Bridge, a novel (Knopf, 2010), and How to Breathe Underwater, a short story collection (Knopf, 2003). Her stories have been published in The Yale Review, where they’ve twice been awarded the Editors’ Prize for best story of the year; the Paris Review, which awarded her the Discovery Prize in 1998; Ploughshares, which selected her work for the Cohen Award for Best Fiction; Zoetrope All-Story, which nominated her for a National Magazine Award; and by the Washington Post Magazine. She is the recipient of two Pushcart Prizes, and her work has appeared in numerous anthologies, including T_he Granta Book of the American Short Story, The Best American Nonrequired Reading, and Th_e Scribner Anthology of American Short Fiction. 

She is a 1996 graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where she held a two-year Creative Writing Teaching Fellowship. She was a Stegner Fellow at Stanford from 1999–2001, and was Stanford’s Marsh McCall Lecturer in Fiction from 2001-2003. Her short story collection, How to Breathe Underwater, won the Joseph Henry Jackson Award and the Northern California Book Award; it was a San Francisco Chronicle and _LA Times B_est Book of the Year and a New York Times Notable Book. Stories from the collection have been presented on NPR’s “Selected Shorts” and BBC Radio 4, have been read at the Steppenwolf Theater’s Stories on Stage, made into short films, and adapted into full-length plays presented by Word for Word Theater Company in San Francisco. The book has been translated into Spanish, French, German, Dutch, Portuguese, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, and Italian. In 2006 it was selected for Stanford’s Three Books series, which made it required reading for all Stanford freshmen. 

Prize anthology mentions

Best American Short Stories 2018*

* indicates notable/special mention

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