Peter Grandbois


Peter Grandbois is an American writer, editor, academic, fencer and fencing coach.

Biography

Peter Grandbois received a B.A. from the University of Colorado—Boulder, an M.A. from the University of Colorado—Boulder, an M.F.A. from Bennington College, and a Ph.D. from the University of Denver. He was an assistant professor at Sacramento State University for four years before taking a position at Denison University in 2010 where he is currently a professor of creative writing and contemporary literature. He is the Poetry Editor for magazine.
He is also the head coach of the Denison University Women's Fencing Team. They compete in the Eastern Women's Fencing Conference as well as the Central Collegiate Fencing Conference.

Writing

Known for his work in all four genres, Grandbois is the author of four poetry collections, three novels, four novella collections or "double monster features," two memoirs, two collections of short stories, and several plays produced in New York, Los Angeles, St. Louis, and Columbus. His poems, short stories, essays, and reviews have appeared in numerous journals and magazines, including: ''Boulevard, The Denver Quarterly, The Gettysburg Review, The Kenyon Review, The Normal School, North Dakota Quarterly, and Prairie Schooner.''

Awards

  • Winner of the 2020 Snyder Prize from Ashland Poetry Press for Last Night I Aged a Hundred Years
  • Finalist for the 2019 Foreword INDIES in the category of Best Multicultural Fiction for half-burnt
  • Notable Essay in The Best American Essays 2019 for "Pain," which first appeared in Broad Street
  • Notable Essay in The Best American Essays 2018 for "Passion," which first appeared in Mount Hope
  • Honorable Mention for the 2017 Foreword INDIES in the Poetry category for This House That
  • Notable Essay in The Best American Essays 2017 for "Honor," which first appeared in the North Dakota Quarterly.
  • The Woman Who Was Me, nominated for five New York Innovative Theatre Awards, including: Outstanding Premiere Production of a Play and Outstanding Solo Performance, 2017
  • Winner of the Brighthorse Books Poetry Prize, 2016 for This House That
  • Silver Medal for the 2015 Foreword IndieFab Awards in the Fantasy category for The Girl on the Swing and At Night in Crumbling Voices
  • Ohio Arts Council Award, 2015
  • Honorable Mention in Best American Horror, volume 7, ed. by Ellen Datlow, for "The Stability of Large Systems," 2015
  • Honorable Mention for the 2014 Foreword IndieFab Awards in the Fantasy category for The Glob Who Girdled Granville and The Secret Lives of Actors
  • Winner of the Neil Labute New Theatre Festival, St. Louis, 2013, for "Present Tense"
  • Finalist for the 2013 Foreword Book of the Year Awards in the Short Stories category for Domestic Disturbances
  • Gold Medal for the 2011 Foreword Book of the Year Awards in the Literary Fiction category for Nahoonkara
  • Notable Essay in The Best American Essays 2011 for "Driving to Puerto Rico," which first appeared in The Potomac Review.
  • Honorable Mention, the Pushcart Prize 2007 for "All or Nothing at the Faberge," which first appeared in Post Road.
  • Selected for the Barnes and Noble "Discover Great New Writer's Program" in 2006 for ''The Gravedigger.''

Poetry

This House That The Three-Legged World—published as Triptych with books by the poets James McCorkle and Robert Miltner everything has become birds
  • ''Last Night I Aged a Hundred Years ''

Novels

The Gravedigger Nahoonkara
  • ''half-burnt''

Novella collections

Wait Your Turn and The Stability of Large Systems The Glob Who Girdled Granville and The Secret Lives of Actors The Girl on the Swing and At Night in Crumbling Voices
  • ''Cat People and Dream Memories of the Fifty Foot Woman''

Memoir

The Arsenic Lobster: A Hybrid Memoir
  • ''Kissing the Lobster''

Short story collections

Domestic Disturbances
  • ''Domestic Bestiary ''

Plays

Mutual Consent--cowritten with Nancy Bell
  • "Present Tense"—a One Act—cowritten with Nancy Bell
  • "The Call"—a One Act—cowritten with Nancy Bell (MadLab: Columbus, OH 2013;

Translations

San Juan: Memoir of a City, by Edgardo Rodriguez Julia