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Michael Martone (born August 22, 1955 in Fort Wayne, Indiana)<ref name="LOC">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is an American author. Since 1977, he has written nearly 30 books and chapbooks.<ref name="Waltman" /> He was a professor at the Program in Creative Writing at the University of Alabama, where he taught from 1996 until his retirement in 2020.<ref name="Waltman">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Martone has won two Fellowships from the NEA and a grant from the Ingram Merrill Foundation. His stories and essays have appeared and been cited in the Pushcart Prize, The Best American Stories and The Best American Essays anthologies.

BiographyEdit

Martone attended Butler University and graduated from Indiana University. He holds an MA from the Writing Seminars of Johns Hopkins University, where he studied under John Barth.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He has been a faculty member of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College, and has taught at Iowa State University, Harvard University, Syracuse University and the University of Alabama.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

He lives in Tuscaloosa with his wife, the poet Theresa Pappas. The couple has two sons, both of whom are writers: Sam Martone and Nicholas V. Pappas.<ref name="autogenerated2">"{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}", Superstition Review, Fall 2009.</ref><ref name="BGSU">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Backstage">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Aside from studying under and befriending John Barth, Martone also developed a close relationship with the writer Thomas Pynchon while the two lived together in Brooklyn.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite journal</ref> It was later on, while teaching at Syracuse in the early 1990s, that Martone befriended a young David Foster Wallace and introduced to him a number of influential works, most notably Lewis Hyde's The Gift.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

CareerEdit

Martone's 2005 work, Michael Martone, is an investigation of form and autobiography. It was originally written as a series of contributor's notes for various publications. One of his central interests is the "false biography" and the often blurry boundary between fact and fiction.<ref name="autogenerated2" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He also considers himself a "neo-regionalist."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The permeable boundary between fact and fiction is reflected in books like his 2001 The Blue Guide to Indiana which, as a disclaimer on the cover makes clear, "is in no way affiliated with, endorsed by, or associated with the series of travel books titled Blue Guide," and "in no way factually depicts or accurately represents the State of Indiana."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The disclaimer, Martone explains, was included after he received a cease and desist letter from the publisher of "the real Blue Guide."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This letter in turn inspired the opening chapter of Martone's 2015 anthology, Winesburg, Indiana, written in the form of a cease and desist letter from the fictional town of WinesburgTemplate:--created by the novelist Sherwood AndersonTemplate:--which claims proprietary rights to “the distribution of Sadness, Fear, Longing, and Confusion itself. We have patented madness. We own Trembling. We extensively market Grief.“<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Martone further obscured the line between fact and fiction in his 2020 book, The Complete Writings of Art Smith, the Bird Boy of Fort Wayne, which was called "an ingenious reimagining of the real-life inventor of skywriting" by the New York Times.<ref name="Lyall">Template:Cite news</ref>

Martone has devoted much of his career to disrupting and defamiliarizing the taken-as-given notions of order, ownership, and identity in his field, and has been described as literature's "most notorious mutineer."<ref name="Baker" /> In 1988 his membership to the American Academy of Poets was briefly revoked after he published two books, one listed as "prose" and one as "poetry" which wereTemplate:--aside from the line-breaks in oneTemplate:--completely identical to one another. His AWP membership has been revoked multiple times.<ref name="Baker">Template:Cite journal</ref> In the late nineties, after reading Neal Bowers' book of non-fiction, Words for the Taking, which describes the author's agonizing hunt for the person who has plagiarized his poems, Martone began to publish poetry under the pseudonym "Neal Bowers." "I am not using Bowers' poems," Martone later explained, "only the name. So when these poems get published, Neal Bowers could actually include them on his vita as far as I'm concerned. I hope he does ... I understand the theft of intellectual property that got Neal Bowers so worked up. But is it plagiarism to actually contribute to someone else's work? I am not stealing his work but actually donating my own to his store of work."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

According to Martone he has written under a number of nom de plumes: "I've published fictional poems under the name Neal Bowers, fictional stories under the names Christian Piers, Jonah Ogles, Arin Fisher, Sarah Mignin, and Matthew Douglas McCabe, fictional nonfiction under the username zzxyzz [on Wikipedia.org], fictional advertisements under the name Klemm Co., and fictional songs with the band under the name AVALANCHE."<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Of this impulse, Martone has said "I’ve never really felt much like 'Michael Martone'—sometimes I think my entire life I’ve been wearing a costume. At some point I put it on to cope with things that Michael Martone was too weak to take on as himself. And after a while I forgot I was even wearing the costume. Now I can’t take it off. I’ve forgotten where the zipper is, and I’m stuck in it."<ref name=":1" />

WorksEdit

  • At a Loss, 1977 (prose poems)
  • Alive and Dead in Indiana, 1984 (fiction)
  • Return to Powers, 1985 (nonfiction)
  • Safety Patrol, 1988 (fiction)
  • A Place of Sense: Pieces of the Midwest, 1988 (editor)
  • Fort Wayne Is Seventh on Hitler’s List, 1990 (fiction)
  • Townships: Pieces of the Midwest, 1992 (editor)
  • Fort Wayne Is Seventh on Hitler’s List [Revised and Expanded], 1992 (fiction)
  • Pensées: The Thoughts of Dan Quayle, 1994 (fiction)
  • Seeing Eye, 1995 (fiction)
  • The Flatness and Other Landscapes, 1999 (nonfiction)
  • The Scribner Anthology of Contemporary Short Fiction: Fifty North American American Stories Since 1970, 1999 (editor, with Lex Williford)
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  • Extreme Fiction: Fabulists and Formalists, 2003 (editor, with Robin Hemley)
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  • Unconventions: Attempting the Art of Craft and the Craft of Art, 2005 (nonfiction)
  • Rules of Thumb: 73 Authors Reveal Their Fiction Writing Fixations, 2006 (editor)
  • Double-Wide: Collected Fiction of Michael Martone, 2007 (fiction)
  • Touchstone Anthology of Contemporary Creative Nonfiction, 2007 (editor, with Lex Williford)
  • Racing in Place: Collages, Fragments, Postcards, Ruins, 2008 (nonfiction)
  • Not Normal, Illinois: Peculiar Fictions from the Flyover, 2009 (editor)
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  • The Complete Writings of Art Smith, the Bird Boy of Fort Wayne, 2020 ("editor") Template:ISBN
  • Template:Cite book Official wiki for Winesburg, Indiana.
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  • Table Talk & Second Thoughts: A Memoir, book released in conjunction with Booth magazine #19 (2024).

AwardsEdit

File:Michael Martone at Druid Arts Awards 2022.jpg
Martone outside the Bama Theatre, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, after the Druid Arts Award Ceremony, April 7, 2022.
  • The Associated Writing Programs Award for Creative Nonfiction, for Flatness and Other Landscapes, University of Georgia Press (1998)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • The Indiana Author's Award (2013)<ref name="IU">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • The Mark Twain Award by The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature (2016)<ref name="twain">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • The 2022 Druid Arts Award for literary educator, The Arts and Humanities Council of Tuscaloosa County, Alabama.<ref name="druid">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • The Truman Capote Prize For Distinguished Work in the Short Story or Literary Non-Fiction (2023), the Monroeville Literary Festival.<ref name="Capote">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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