George Makana Clark Explained

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George Makana Clark is a writer born in Rhodesia and living in the United States. He is the author of the 2011 novel The Raw Man, as well as "The Center of the World", a short story for which he won the 2006 O'Henry Prize. Clark teaches writing at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

Education

Clark earned a PhD from Florida State University.[1]

Career

In 1997, Clark published a short story collection called The Small Bees' Honey. He has seven stories anthologized in The Best American Short Stories series. In 2006 Clark won the O'Henry Prize for his short story "The Center of the World," published in the Georgia Review.[2]

In 2011 Clark published The Raw Man. The Guardian said the novel, set during the Zimbabwean war for independence, "captures liminal characters at a liminal moment in Zimbabwe's history."[3] The novel was translated into French by Cécile Chartres and Elisabeth Samama[4] as Les Douze Portes dans la maison du sergent Gordon.[5]

Clark teaches writing at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George Clark. 2020-12-19. English. University of Wisconsin-Madison. en-US.
  2. Web site: The O. Henry Prize Stories. Random House. 16 September 2016.
  3. News: Habila. Helon. The Raw Man by George Makana Clark - review. 16 September 2016. The Guardian. 3 June 2011.
  4. News: Hecht. Emmanuel. August 31, 2015. George Makana Clark l'Africain. L'Express. 16 September 2016.
  5. News: Ovaldé. Véronique. Seconde chance. Le liseur de sang. 16 September 2016. Le Monde. 21 April 2016. fr.