Michael A. Arnzen | |
Birth Name: | Michael A. Arnzen |
Birth Date: | May 17, 1967 |
Birth Place: | Amityville, New York, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | Colorado State University Pueblo (BA) University of Idaho (MA) University of Oregon (PhD) |
Period: | 1989–present |
Genre: | Fiction, Horror Fiction, Critical Theory, Poetry |
Notableworks: | Grave Markings |
Michael A. Arnzen (born May 17, 1967) is an American horror writer. He has won the Bram Stoker Award three times.
Arnzen was born on May 17, 1967, in Amityville, New York.[1] After a brief stint in the United States Army overseas, where he began writing horror stories to entertain his fellow soldiers, he moved to Colorado, where he began his writing career.
Arnzen received the Bram Stoker Award in 1994 for Grave Markings.[1] Shortly thereafter, he earned a master's degree while working on his second novel, soon followed by his Ph.D. in English at the University of Oregon, where he studied the role of horror and nostalgia in 20th-century culture in a dissertation called The Popular Uncanny.
100 Jolts (Raw Dog Screaming Press) features 100 of Arnzen's flash fiction stories. His short story collection, Fluid Mosaic (Wildside Press) collects his best stories from the 1990s. His poetry chapbooks include Freakcidents, Gorelets: Unpleasant Poetry, Dying (With No Apologies to Martha Stewart), Paratabloids, Chew, Sportuary, and Writhing in Darkness. His most recent published work is Play Dead, a crime thriller with a poker theme.
Arnzen holds a Ph.D. in English and currently teaches graduate studies in Seton Hill University's Writing Popular Fiction Program and undergraduate English courses at Seton Hill University in Greensburg, Pennsylvania.
Arnzen runs Mastication Publications, an umbrella imprint for creative ephemera, chapbooks, collector's items and independently published ebooks.[2]