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SDSU Professor Receives National Endowment for the
Arts Literary Fellowship Grant
Contact: Lorena Nava
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Tel: (619) 594-3952, Cell: (619) 309-5179
lnava@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO – (Friday, Feb. 17, 2006) – For author William Luvaas, the 10th time was the charm when applying for the National Endowment for the Arts Literary Fellowship grant.
Luvaas, a creative writing lecturer at San Diego State University for the past nine years, recently received a $20,000 fellowship from the organization. With the grant, Luvaas is taking a sabbatical this spring semester in order to finish his forthcoming novel, “Dead Weight,” and his collection of short stories, “A Working Man’s Apocrypha.”
The recognition, which came in a unanimous decision by the literature panel, comes 20 years after he first applied for the award in 1986. The grant is awarded every other year to 50 prose writers throughout the country and is highly competitive, receiving hundreds of applications during each application period.
“For a writer, nothing is more important than persistence,” Luvaas said. “You have to keep following your muse. If you keep producing strong work, it will eventually be recognized.”
Luvaas’ short story collection includes the story “A Working Man’s Apocrypha,” which Luvaas submitted with his fellowship application and was originally published in the summer 2004 issue of the Antioch Review, one of the oldest literary magazines in the country. The story, which is loosely based on a story told to Luvaas about a Hemet, Calif. caretaker, explores the relationship between two fictional characters—a woman and her caretaker who is dying from diabetes. Many of the stories in the collection take place throughout Riverside County, where Luvaas lives, and deal with the resiliency of the human spirit when faced with tragedy.
“A Working Man’s Apocrypha” will be published in spring 2007 by the University of Oklahoma Press. The collection will feature illustrations by Lucinda Luvaas, Luvaas’ wife and multi media artist, and will be packaged with a DVD featuring a short film version of “A Working Man’s Apocrypha,” directed and produced by Lucinda.
On his close working relationship with his wife, Luvaas said, “I’ve always told my students that if your mate is not supportive of your work, you’re in trouble.”
Luvaas’ novel “Dead Weight” chronicles how a man’s one bad decision made in a panicked moment results in the death of a neighbor. Subsequently, other poor choices are made by the main character, ending in the breakdown of his character and sense of self.
Other novels by Luvaas include “The Seductions of Natalie Bach,” which was published by Little, Brown and Company, and “Going Under,” published by Putnam Publishing Group. Other stories, essays and articles by Luvaas have also appeared in The American Fiction Anthology (Vol. 9), Confrontation, Cosmopolitan, Glimmer Train, North American Review, Pretext, Short Story, The Sun, Thema, The Village Voice and The Washington Post Book World. Another story by Luvaas, “The Firewood Wars,” was co-winner of the Fiction Network’s Second National Fiction Competition.
SDSU is the oldest and largest institution of higher education in the San Diego region. Founded in 1897, SDSU offers bachelor’s degrees in 81 areas, master’s degrees in 72 and doctorates in 16. SDSU’s nearly 33,000 students participate in academic curricula distinguished by direct faculty contact and an increasingly international emphasis that prepares them for a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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