Carolyn Ferrell is the author of the short-story collection, Don’t Erase Me, which was awarded the Art Seidenbaum Award of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize program, the John C. Zacharis Award given by Ploughshares, and the Quality Paperback Book Prize for First Fiction. She has also received grants from the Fulbright Association, German Academic Exchange (DAAD), City University of New York MAGNET Program, and National Endowment for the Arts. Ferrell’s stories have been anthologized in Best American Short Stories 2018 and The Best American Short Stories of the Century, among other places. She teaches writing at Sarah Lawrence College and lives in New York with her husband and children.
Awards: LA Times (1997) see all
Genres: Literary Fiction
Books containing stories by Carolyn Ferrell
The Best American Short Stories of the Century (2008)
(Best American Short Stories)
edited by
Katrina Kenison and John Updike
More books
Awards
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Award nominations
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Carolyn Ferrell recommends
Curdle Creek (2024)
Yvonne Battle-Felton
"Tautly written, utterly gripping, Yvonne Battle-Felton's novel invites the reader into a world of mystery and mythology. Ultimately, Curdle Creek is about perseverance and hope, about remembering the past while boldly embracing the future and about posing the eternal question: how and where can a Black person simply be?"
Ellipses (2024)
Vanessa Lawrence
"Vanessa Lawrence's masterful debut deftly explores the stakes facing a young, queer, Asian female writer navigating the scary waters of the New York magazine world. Every page is a prose treasure, eloquently nailing the pulse of an often ruthless milieu while managing to make us laugh at its excesses and failures."
The Home for Wayward Girls (2023)
Marcia Bradley
"The Home for Wayward Girls charts one woman's transformative journey from 'preordained' suffering to emotional and spiritual freedom. Bradley evokes the tradition of women - from Amy Lowell to Amelia Earhart to Rosa Parks - who've overcome life's obstacles to honor their 'special spirit,' their 'inner strength' - and situates them within Loretta's own tale of audacity and courage. This ardent novel is a loving tribute to the power that lies within women - I read it feeling great hope in my heart."