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Noted Young American Author Wins Evil Companions Literary Award
Tuesday, March 4, 1997
FORT COLLINS--Mona Simpson, heralded as one of the nation's
best young American authors, is the winner of the 1997 Evil
Companions Literary Award.
Simpson, author of three critically-acclaimed novels
including her latest work, "A Regular Guy," will receive the
award at a special reception April 10 at the Oxford Hotel.
Simpson will read from "A Regular Guy" at the award event
from 6-8 p.m. April 10 at the Oxford Hotel on 17th Street in
Denver. Tickets are $35 per person or $60 per couple and include
a one-year subscription to the Colorado State's literary journal,
the Colorado Review. All proceeds from the event benefit the
journal.
The Oxford Hotel will provide hors d'oeuvres for the Evil
Companions event and the nearby Wynkoop Brewing Co. will brew a
special Evil Companions Ale. Tickets are on sale at the Tattered
Cover Book Store in Denver, the Oxford Hotel and the Colorado
Review office at Colorado State. To order, call (970) 491-5449.
The award, which annually goes to a writer living in,
writing about or with ties to the West, is presented by the
Colorado Review in collaboration with the Oxford Hotel and the
Tattered Cover Book Store. The award is named for the self-
proclaimed Evil Companions, a group of Denver journalists who
gathered in the 1950s and 1960s to drink, socialize and discuss
writing.
Like the Evil Companions group, the event offers food, drink
and a gathering place to socialize about literature.
The idea for the event was spawned by a conversation several
years ago between Colorado Review Editor David Milofsky and
Tattered Cover owner Joyce Meskis about starting a signature
literary award in Denver. The Oxford Hotel got involved, along
with Wynkoop, and from there it blossomed into a major Denver
event.
"It has now been five years since we started Evil
Companions, and it continues to grow each year," Milosfky said.
"This is an excellent opportunity to meet a best-selling author
and help promote literature in Colorado."
Simpson, 39, earned national acclaim for her three novels,
all of which illustrate portraits of families whose members
search for meaning in each other and in themselves.
Her first two novels, written in first-person narrative,
detail the life of a young girl in search of a father she's never
known and a mother who has abandoned her emotionally. Her latest
novel, "A Regular Guy," also delves into the strained
relationships of a scattered family, but in a third-person
narrative that literary critics agree works well.
About the quirky families that dominate all three of her
novels, Simpson explained in a 1996 interview with Publisher's
Weekly: "What else is there but families? There is a sense now
that it is intriguing to write about some of the more modern
forms of family that are extreme. But actually, I'm interested in
the more subtle things, too."
Evil Companions organizers hope Simpson's wide appeal and
writing style will draw an even larger crowd than in years past,
said Milofsky.
"Families are one of the great subjects of literature, which
I think is why her writing style works so well," Milofsky said of
Simpson's work. "She has the common touch in the sense that she
speaks to everyone but has a very sophisticated framework that
sets her apart."
Simpson was born in Green Bay, Wis., but moved to Beverly
Hills with her mother as a teen-ager. After graduating from high
school, she headed to the University of California at Berkeley to
pursue a writing degree. She later moved to New York and enrolled
in the graduate writing program at Columbia, writing poetry
before turning to fiction short stories.
Her first book, "Anywhere But Here," defied literary
expectations for a first novel, selling 25,000 copies in hard
cover and 200,000 in paperback, according to the Publisher's
Weekly interview. The sequel, "The Lost Father," attracted
similar acclaim.
A New Yorker for several years, Simpson now lives in
Southern California with her three-year-old son, Gabriel, and her
husband, Richard Appel. Appel left his job as a federal
prosecutor in New York to write full-time for the TV comedy
series "The Simpsons." Simpson returns to New York to teach at
Bard College each fall semester but lives in Los Angeles the rest
of the year.
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