Bruce Henricksen
Bruce Henricksen (born 1941), American author, scholar, and editor, grew up in the town of Wanamingo, Minnesota and the city of Minneapolis.
Life
He graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1963 with a degree in English, having studied under poets Allen Tate and James Wright. In 1970, he received a Ph.D. from the University of California and began a career at Loyola University New Orleans, where he chaired the English Department and was editor of the New Orleans Review from 1980 - 1986.[1] While at Loyola, he received an NEH summer fellowship to Princeton University and was a participant in the Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Duke University and in The School of Criticism and Theory at Northwestern University.
As one of three editors of New Orleans Review (including poet John Biguenet and fellow English professor John Mosier), Henricksen helped turn the regional magazine into a major organ of critical discussion, bringing such theorists as Frederic Jameson, Jean-Francois Lyotard and others to the pages of the journal. His academic books include Murray Krieger and Contemporary Critical Theory, Reorientations: Critical Theories and Pedagogies, with Thais Morgan, and a widely referenced study of novelist Joseph Conrad entitled Nomadic Voices: Conrad and the Subject of Narrative.
After surgery for throat cancer in 1996, Henricksen returned to Minnesota to live with his new wife, Victoria. There, what had previously been a secondary endeavor, writing fiction, became the primary one. His short stories appeared in numerous magazines, and in 2005 his story collection, Ticket to a Lonely Town, was the only named finalist in the national competition for the Grace Paley Prize. It was published the following year by Atomic Quill Press. Stories in this book are connected by recurrent characters and places, as the collection dramatizes various causes and forms of loneliness. In 2008 his novel, After the Floods (Lost Hills Books) appeared. Praised by the New Orleans Times-Picayune as a "thoroughly enjoyable flight of fancy" and "a spiritual comedy," the novel, set partially in post-Katrina New Orleans, combines magical realism and deconstruction in a manner at once imaginative and accessible.[2] Also in 2008, Henricksen co-edited a volume in honor of a former mentor, From the Other World: Poems in Memory of James Wright (Lost Hills Books), to which many of our best-known poets contributed.
He founded Lost Hills Books, a small, literary publishing house, in 2007.[3]
As of 2008, Bruce Henricksen lives in Duluth Minnesota. During that year, he spoke on James Wright in libraries in the Twin Cities and throughout Minnesota. He and a few contributors to From the Other World also participated in a memorial event for James Wright at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, where he and Wright first met.[4][5][6]
Selected works
- Murray Krieger and Contemporary Literary Theory (Columbia University Press, 1986)
- Reorientations: Critical Theories and Pedagogies (University of Illinois Press, 1990)
- Nomadic Voices: Conrad and the Subject of Narrative (University of Illinois Press, 1992)
- The Zero Club Papers (Digital. 2006)
- Children of the Storm (Digital. 2007)
- After the Floods (Lost Hills Books, 2008)
- From the Other World: Poems in Memory of James Wright (with Robert Johnson. Lost Hills Books, 2008)
References
- "New Orleans Review: About". neworleansreview.org. New Orleans Review. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
- Larson, Susan (27 February 2008). "Feeling Minnesota: A whimsical look at post-K exile (book review)". Times - Picayune.
- Olsen, Tom (7 March 2013). "After long journey, Duluth writer finds his niche as book publisher". Lake County News-Chronicle. McClatchey.
- Biography (Barnes and Noble) Archived July 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- Publications and Prizes(Poets & Writers Newsletter)
- BruceHenricksen (Minnesota Authors) Archived February 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine