
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING
AUTHOR TO PRESENT
AT MARYGROVE
COLLEGE
DETROIT NATIVE JEFFREY EUGENIDES COMES HOME
DETROIT, MI, SEPTEMBER 15, 2006 – Marygrove College hosts
the return of Detroit-area native and second-generation Greek-American author
Jeffrey Eugenides on Sunday,
October 29, 2006, at 4 p.m. in the Madame
Cadillac Building
in Detroit. In a presentation titled “’All Swirl and
Hubbub’: Jeffrey Eugenides and Detroit,”
he will read from his 2003 Pulitzer Prize winning novel Middlesex. A reception and
book signing will follow the presentation.
It is free and open to the public.
Eugenides
was born in 1960 to Greek-American parents and raised in Grosse Pointe, Michigan.
He received his bachelor’s degree from Brown
University and his MFA in creative
writing from Stanford
University. He has worked
as a Detroit cabdriver, a busboy, a volunteer
with Mother Theresa in Calcutta,
a magazine writer, and a newsletter editor. His acclaimed first novel, The
Virgin Suicides (1993), set in Grosse Pointe, became a major motion
picture, directed by Sofia Coppola and released by Paramount Pictures in 2000.
Eugenides has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National
Endowment for the Arts, and the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences. In 1991, an excerpt from The Virgin Suicides was awarded
the Aga Khan Prize for fiction, and in 2003 Middlesex received the
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.
“Expansive and radiantly generous…. Deliriously American” –The
New York Times Book Review
“A towering achievement…. [Eugenides] has emerged as the
great American writer that many of us suspected him of being.” –Los Angeles
Times Book Review
This
is a Defining Detroit event of
Marygrove’s Institute for Detroit Studies and the English
and Modern Languages Department, an interdisciplinary series of public exhibits, lectures,
performances, readings and discussions that explore different aspects of
Detroit life, made possible with the support of the John S. and James L. Knight
Foundation, the Michigan Council for the Arts and Cultural Affairs and the
National Endowment for the Arts. Previous
presenters include Detroit
poet laureate Naomi Long Madgett, novelist Joyce Carol Oates, historians Thomas
Sugrue and Kevin Boyle, poets Philip Levine and Lawrence Joseph, and musical conductor and
choirmaster Brazeal Dennard poet.
Eugenides’
appearance is part of a fall 2006 collaborative series between Marygrove, the
Matrix Theatre, the Downtown Detroit YMCA, Inside Out, and Wayne State
University called Detroit Stories that records and
presents drama, fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction and oral history.
For more information, call Dr.
Frank Rashid at 313-927-1448 or visit www.marygrove.edu. A photo of Jeffrey Eugenides is available at http://www.marygrove.edu/news.
Marygrove College is an independent liberal arts college
located at 8425 W. McNichols Rd.
in Detroit. More than 1,200 students attend classes in
its undergraduate and graduate programs in education, business, human resource
management, social justice, social work, science, theater, music and the fine
arts.
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EDITORS: A 300-dpi photograph of Jeffrey Eugenides can
be found at www.marygrove.edu/news.