Marie Lee
Marie Myung-Ok Lee | |
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Employer | Brown University |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 이명옥 |
Revised Romanization | I Myeong-ok |
McCune–Reischauer | I Myŏng'ok |
Marie Myung-Ok Lee (born 1964) is a Korean-American author and essayist.
Her stories and essays have been published in The Atlantic, Witness, The Kenyon Review, TriQuarterly, Newsweek, Slate and The New York Times. She has received honors for her work including an O. Henry honorable mention for an adaptation of a chapter from Somebody's Daughter, and was a recipient of the MacColl Johnson literature fellowship and 2010 Fiction Fellowship from the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts. Lee has been a Yaddo, MacDowell Colony and VCCA fellow, has served as a National Book Award judge, and has taught fiction writing at Yale University. She is a founder and former Board President of the Asian American Writers' Workshop. She currently teaches at Brown University. She is married to Karl Jacoby, an environmental historian at Columbia University, and lives in New York City.[1]
Lee's novel, Somebody's Daughter (2005), is based on her year as a Fulbright Scholar to South Korea, taking oral histories of Korean birth mothers. She has been involved in the adoptee community for many years, but Lee herself is not adopted. One of her family members is adopted from Korea.[2][3]
References
- ↑ "Biography of Karl Jacoby". Amazon. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- ↑ Smith, Andy (17 April 2005). A Korean-American journey: Providence's Marie Myung-Ok Lee writes her first novel for adults, Providence Journal
- ↑ (21 February 2005). Fiction Review: Somebody's Daughter, Publisher's Weekly
External links
- Works by or about Marie Lee in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Citation for Marie Lee's current position at Brown University:
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