Matthew Vollmer Explained

Matthew Vollmer
Birth Date: May 25, 1974
Birth Place:Andrews, North Carolina, U.S.
Education:University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (BA)
North Carolina State University (MA)
Iowa Writers' Workshop (MFA)

Matthew Vollmer (born May 25, 1974) is an American writer, editor, and professor at Virginia Tech.

Life

Matthew Vollmer was born on May 25, 1974, in Andrews, North Carolina, where he was raised.[1] He graduated with a BA in English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1996. He holds an MA in English from North Carolina State University, which he received in 1998, and an MFA in fiction from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, which he received in 2006. Vollmer currently teaches at Virginia Tech as an Associate Professor of English.[2]

Works

Vollmer is the author of two collections of short fiction, Gateway to Paradise and Future Missionaries of America, as well as two collections of essays, inscriptions for headstones and Permanent Exhibit. With David Shields, he is the co-editor of Fakes: An Anthology of Pseudo Interviews, Faux-Lectures, Quasi-Letters, “Found” Texts, and Other Fraudulent Artifacts, which collects a number of stories that masquerade as other forms of writing. Vollmer is also the editor of A Book of Uncommon Prayer, a volume of everyday invocations from over 60 writers, each of whom were charged with writing–regardless of their religious inclinations–a prayer. His fifth book, This World Is Not Your Home, was published by EastOver Press in March 2022 and in 2023 Hub City Press published a book-length essay: All of Us Together in the End.

Vollmer's work has also been published widely in magazines, including Paris Review, Glimmer Train, The Sun, Virginia Quarterly Review, Epoch, Tin House, the Oxford American, Colorado Review, Gulf Coast, Ecotone, Hayden’s Ferry Review, The Antioch Review, Willow Springs, DIAGRAM, Portland Review, Tampa Review, Passages North, PANK, New England Review, The Normal School, Confrontation, Salt Hill, Fugue, PRISM International, and New Letters.[3]

Bibliography

Books

Edited works

Awards and honors

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "The Story is This Weird Frankenstein's Monster": An Interview With Matthew Vollmer – Vol. 1 Brooklyn. 2021-01-09. vol1brooklyn.com.
  2. Web site: Matthew Vollmer. 2021-01-09. liberalarts.vt.edu. en.
  3. Web site: Bio Matthew Vollmer. 2021-01-09. en-US.
  4. Web site: Matthew Vollmer awarded National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. 2021-01-09. www.vtnews.vt.edu. en.
  5. Web site: 13 May 2013. Matthew Vollmer Selected for Best American Essays. New England Review.
  6. Web site: Works by two English faculty appear in prestigious anthology. 2021-01-09. www.vtnews.vt.edu. en.