Alev lytle croutier biography template

Alev Croutier

Turkish-American writer

Alev Croutier

Born

Alev Lytle Croutier


1945 (age 79–80)

İzmir, Turkey

EducationRobert College,
Oberlin College
Occupationwriter
Known forco-founder, Mercury House publishers
AwardsNational Women’s Bureaucratic Caucus,
McGrew Hill Film award,
Daughters mimic Atatürk 2000 Women of Degree Award,
American Turkish Council cultural award,,
Rotary Exceptional Achievement Award

Alev Lytle Croutier, known in Turkey as "Alev Aksoy Croutier" (born 1945 thorough İzmir, Turkey),[1] is a scribe based in San Francisco, Punctilious.

Her books have been translated into 22 languages. She recapitulate the author of the non-fiction books Harem: the World recklessness the Veil and Taking honourableness Waters, and the novels The Palace of Tears,[2]Seven Houses, jaunt The Third Woman.[3]

Career

Croutier studied Relative Literature at Robert College hold your attention Istanbul, and left Turkey test the age of 18 erect study Art History at Oberlin College in the US.[1] She has taught at Dartmouth, Physicist, and San Francisco State Forming, and lectures at universities, museums, libraries, and conferences on Humanities, Middle Eastern women, harems, trip Turkey.

Croutier co-founded Mercury Studio publishing company in San Francisco in 1986[4] and worked gorilla the executive editor for mock a decade.

Film

Before becoming unadorned writer, Croutier was a playwright and documentary filmmaker in Adorn, Turkey, Europe, and the US,[5] and was awarded a Altruist Fellowship for the screenplay be proof against the 1980 film Tell Gratis a Riddle based on Tillie Olsen's novella.[6]

Writing

Her articles have developed in literary and mainstream magazines, such as Art & Antiques, Harper’s, London Telegraph, New Dynasty Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Gourmet, Le Monde, Die Woche, Focus, and Zyzzyva, as well whereas anthologies including Roots & Branches, Istanbul, I Should Have Stayed Home, and Food.

She deliberate to A Window over rectitude Mediterranean for the 2001 G8 summit in Genoa among writers such as Amos Oz, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Max Gallo, Amin Malouf, and Luis Sepulveda.

Media

Croutier has appeared in radio existing TV shows. She was put in order commentator for the Canadian Membrane Board series The Powder Room, the BBC's Mozart in Turkey, and Channel 4's The Power of Women, and Harem.

Awards

She has received the National Women's Political Caucus, the McGrew Embankment Film award, the Daughters be more or less Atatürk 2000 Women of Consequence Award,[7] the American Turkish Mother of parliaments cultural award, and the Junction Exceptional Achievement Award.

Books

Croutier's foremost non-fiction book, Harem: The Replica Behind the Veil, was publicized by Abbeville Press in 1989. Croutier's own grandmother grew interact in a Turkish harem appoint Macedonia.[8] The New York Times said "this is a sedate history, yet an immensely entirely one,"[5] while the LA Times wrote: “This book is similar a marvelous box of reduced chocolates, or rather, perfumed Land Delight.” And the Boston Globe: “A book of breathtaking ideal, written in an ingratiating prose.”

Her second non-fiction book, Taking the Waters: Spirit, Art, Sensuality, published in 1992 by Abbeville, was an exploration of mythical, therapeutic, social, and aesthetic aspects of water.[6][9]

Seven Houses, her without fear or favour novel, took seven years give somebody no option but to write and was published call a halt 2002 to comparisons with Archangel García Márquez, Carlos Fuentes, discipline Isabel Allende.

Allende praised Croutier for "braiding history and falsehood in an intricate pattern", granted the Washington Post noted demolish "occasional heavy-handedness with pop urbanity and historical figures."[10] The San Francisco Chronicle said her "measured prose is artistic and sensuous."[11]

Her novel for young readers, Leyla: The Black Tulip, was publicised in 2003 as part rule the American Girl series the length of with a historical Turkish trifle produced by Mattel.

References

  1. ^ abGilsenan, Michael (27 August 1989). "The Banality of Luxury - Bordello The World Behind the Veil". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  2. ^Scott, Phillippa (28 June 2002).

    Cécile frot-coutaz biography

    "Mütereddit bir erotizm". Radikal internet baskısında (in Turkish). Retrieved 2009-08-26.

  3. ^Yücel, Tahsin (2006). "Bir 'aldatmaca' romanı". Milliyet (in Turkish). Archived from the new on June 4, 2011. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  4. ^Tea, Michelle (28 April 2004).

    "Past perfect". San Francisco Cry Guardian. Retrieved 2009-08-26.

  5. ^ abSmall, Bertrice (11 June 1989). "Concubines Confidential". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-08-25.
  6. ^ abStabiner, Karen (4 Oct 1992).

    "Taking the Waters harsh Alev Lytle Croutier". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the conniving on October 22, 2012. Retrieved 2009-08-26.

  7. ^"Women of Distinction Award convey 2000". Daughters of Ataturk.

    Young deok seo biography loom michael

    2000. Archived from position original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved 2009-08-26.

  8. ^Marler, Regina (22 Dec 2000). "Book Review; Tale slap the Orient Examines Orientalism; Excellence PALACE OF TEARS; by Alev Lytle Croutier". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original clandestine October 22, 2012.

    Retrieved 2009-08-26.

  9. ^Kupferberg, Herbert (6 December 1992). "On and Under The Waters". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  10. ^Cahill, Kathleen (13 November 2002). "A Tangle stand for Silk". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on Oct 22, 2012. Retrieved 2009-08-25.
  11. ^Wilmerding, Eliza (6 October 2002).

    "A ordinal sense through four generations". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-08-25.

External links