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Katherine Dunn
Born
Katherine Karen Dunn

(1945-10-24)October 24, 1945
DiedMay 11, 2016(2016-05-11) (aged 70)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materReed College
OccupationWriter
Years active1965–2016
Notable workGeek Love
SpousePaul Pomerantz
Children1

Katherine Karen Dunn (October 24, 1945 – May 11, 2016) was an American novelist, journalist, voice artist, radio personality, book reviewer, and poet from Portland, Oregon. She is best known for her novel Geek Love (1989). She was also a prolific writer on boxing.

Early life[edit]

Dunn was born in Garden City, Kansas, in 1945.[1] She was the second-youngest of five siblings; her father left before she was two. Her mother, Velma Golly, an artist from North Dakota, married a mechanic[2] or/and fisherman from the Pacific Northwest.[3] The family moved often during her childhood.[3] She went to high school in Tigard, Oregon, and later attended Reed College in Portland on a full scholarship, but never graduated. She suffered a difficult childhood due to poverty and a violent mother. She left home for good when she was 17. Poverty was an important element in her novels as well.[4] In college she majored in philosophy and then psychology.[3]

Later life and career[edit]

Dunn began her first novel Attic (1970) while studying at Reed College. During a Christmas break trip to Ashbury Heights in 1967 she met a man she would spend the next ten years with. Together, they traveled to Mexico, Boston, Newfoundland, and Seville, where she finished Attic, then to Karpathos. Here, she finished her second novel, Truck (1971), and became pregnant.[3] She gave birth to her son in Dublin, Ireland. After living for seven years at various locations, they returned to Portland to stay "because there was a good alternative public school", namely the Metropolitan Learning Center.[3] She settled in the Nob Hill neighborhood, where she resided until her death.[2]

Dunn waited tables in the morning before her son woke up, and tended bars at night, painted houses, and did voice-over work.[3] In the 1970s, she hosted a radio show on Portland's community radio station KBOO, during which she read short fiction by other authors. She taught advanced classes in creative writing at Oregon's Lewis & Clark College and a graduate course in the same subject at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon.[5]

In 1981, Dunn began writing about boxing in Willamette Week. Having fallen in love with the sport, she went on to cover the sport for a number of publications, including PDXS,[6] The Oregonian, and The New York Times.[7] She has been described as "one of the better boxing writers in the United States".[8] She started boxing training in her 40s.[2]

She was an editor and contributor for the online boxing magazine cyberboxingzone.com. In the 1990s, Dunn wrote a regular column on boxing for PDXS , in which she at one time provided detailed criticism of Evander Holyfield's sportsmanship in his controversial fight with Mike Tyson.[9] She won the Dorothea Lange—Paul Taylor Award in 2004 for her work on School of Hard Knocks: The Struggle for Survival in America's Toughest Boxing Gyms.[10] Her essays on boxing were collected in her 2009 collection One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing.[11]

Her third published novel was Geek Love (1989), and it was by far her best-known work. It was a finalist for the National Book Award. It was a finalist, also, for the Bram Stoker Award for first horror novel. Dunn described her memory of when she began writing it in the late 1970s, walking to Portland's Washington Park Rose Garden, contemplating nature versus nurture and the genesis of the book with its publication in 1989.[3] It remains a strong seller, with over a half-million copies sold, never having gone out of print.[4]

In 1989, Dunn announced that she was working on a new novel, entitled The Cut Man.[12] As of 1999, she was still working on the project.[13] In 2008, it was reported that publisher Alfred A. Knopf had scheduled The Cut Man for release in September.[8] The novel remains unpublished. An excerpt was published in the summer 2010 issue of The Paris Review[7] under the title "Rhonda Discovers Art".[14]

In 2012, Dunn reunited with Paul Pomerantz, her boyfriend from Reed College, and they married.[2] Dunn died on May 11, 2016. Her son stated her death was from complications of lung cancer.[15][6]

Posthumous publications[edit]

In 2022, the third novel she wrote, Toad (1971), with an Introduction by Molly Crabapple, was published posthumously by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, making it her fourth published novel. (Thus, it was written about 18 years before Geek Love.) In 1971 Harper and Row, who had published her novels Attic and Truck, also bought the rights to Toad. However, they ultimately did not publish it. (“Nobody in this book is likable!” she was told.) It is about “a woman who has retreated into a life of isolation following a breakdown reflects on her time as an impoverished college student in the early 1970s in Portland, Oregon at the height of the women’s liberation movement, and the group of wealthy trust fund kids she befriends.”[16] It was rejected by other publishers in years following, and after 1979 she set the book aside. It was only published because it was found in her archives at Lewis & Clark College by Naomi Huffman, an editor. Dunn's son and others pushed to have this work finally published.[4]

A short story related to Toad, "The Resident Poet" was published by The New Yorker in 2020.[17] Another short story, "The Education of Mrs. R." was published by The Paris Review in 2022.[18] A book of her short stories is also due to be published.[16]

Bibliography[edit]

Fiction[edit]

Novels[edit]

  • Attic (1970)
  • Truck (1971)
  • Geek Love (1989)
  • Toad (1 November 2022)[19]

Short stories[edit]

Nonfiction[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Katherine (Karen) Dunn." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2005. Biography In Context. Web. 5 Oct. 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d SAM ROBERTS (14 May 2016). "Katherine Dunn, Author of 'Geek Love,' Dies at 70". NY Times. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Roper, Caitlin (April 2, 2014). "Geek Loved". Willamette Week.
  4. ^ a b c "Review | 'Geek Love' put Katherine Dunn on the map. Was it her sole masterpiece?". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  5. ^ "Geek Love Begets More Love Through Pacific University's Katherine Dunn Scholarship".
  6. ^ a b "Award-winning Portland writer Katherine Dunn dies at 70". Portland Tribune. May 12, 2016.
  7. ^ a b Cowles, Gregory (June 11, 2010). "The Return of Katherine Dunn". New York Times Paper Cuts Blog.
  8. ^ a b Starr, Karla (February 1, 2006). "But you promised!". Willamette Week. Archived from the original on October 10, 2007.
  9. ^ Dunn, Katherine., Defending Tyson, PDXS via cyberboxingzone.com, 1997-07-09, Retrieved on 2007-04-18.
  10. ^ Announcement of 2004 prize winners Archived 2007-08-12 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Schaffner Press Website Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ The Guardian, April 1989
  13. ^ Buckingham, Matt (10 November 1999). "Whatever Happened To...?". Willamette Week. Archived from the original on 23 December 2010. Retrieved 2013-09-03.
  14. ^ Dunn, Katherine (2010). "Rhonda Discovers Art". The Paris Review. Archived from the original on 2010-07-03.
  15. ^ Jaquiss, Nigel (May 12, 2016). "Katherine Dunn, Author of Geek Love, Dies at 70". Willamette Week.
  16. ^ a b "Attention: We are getting TWO new Katherine Dunn books". 30 January 2020.
  17. ^ ""The Resident Poet"". The New Yorker. 2020-04-29. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  18. ^ Dunn, Katherine (2022). "The Education of MRS. R." Vol. Fall 2022, no. 241. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  19. ^ Vondersmith, Jason. "The road for 'Toad' leads to book deal for late Katherine Dunn". Portland Tribune. Pamplin Media Group. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  20. ^ Redden, Jim. ""Geek Love" by Portland writer Katherine Dunn named Great American Novel". portlandtribune.com. Pamplin Media Group. Retrieved 28 March 2024.

External links[edit]

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