Peter Trachtenberg

Website

Peter Trachtenberg is the author of the memoir 7 TATTOOS (Crown, 1997), THE BOOK OF CALAMITIES: Five Questions About Suffering and Its Meaning (Little Brown, August 2008), and ANOTHER INSANE DEVOTION (Da Capo, October 2012), a book about the search for a missing cat that’s also an encoded exploration of love and marriage. His essays, journalism, and short fiction have been published in The New Yorker, Harper’s, BOMB, TriQuarterly, O, The New York Times Travel Magazine, the Virginia Quarterly Review, StoryQuarterly, Guernica, and A Public Space. His commentaries have been broadcast on NPR’S “All Things Considered.” Trachtenberg has taught creative writing at the New School, the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, the City College of New York, St. Mary’s College of California, and the University of Iowa Summer Writers Festival. He’s also taught in Bard College’s Language & Thinking Program. He is an associate professor and director of the Writing Program at the University of Pittsburgh and a member of the core faculty of the Bennington Writing Seminars. He’s the recipient of a NYFA artist’s fellowship, the Nelson Algren Award for Short Fiction, a Whiting Writers Fellowship, a 2010 Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and residencies at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center and Yaddo. The Book of Calamities was given the 2009 Phi Beta Kappa Society’s Ralph Waldo Emerson Award “for scholarly studies that contribute significantly to interpretations of the intellectual and cultural condition of humanity.” Another Insane Devotion was a 2012 New York Times Editors’ Choice.

Prize anthology mentions

Pushcart (CNF) 2017*

* indicates notable/special mention

Send questions, comments and corrections to info@creativewritingmfa.info.

Disclaimer: No endorsement of these ratings should be implied by the writers and writing programs listed on this site, or by the editors and publishers of Best American Short Stories, Best American Essays, Best American Poetry, The O. Henry Prize Stories and The Pushcart Prize Anthology.