Elif Batuman Popular Books

Elif Batuman Biography & Facts

Elif Batuman (born 1977) is an American author, academic, and journalist. She is the author of three books: a memoir, The Possessed, and the novels The Idiot, which was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and Either/Or. Batuman is a staff writer for The New Yorker. Early life Elif Batuman was born in New York City to Turkish parents, and grew up in New Jersey. She graduated from Harvard College in 1999 and received her doctorate in comparative literature from Stanford University. While attending graduate school, Batuman studied the Uzbek language in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Her dissertation, The Windmill and the Giant: Double-Entry Bookkeeping in the Novel, is about the process of social research and solitary construction undertaken by novelists. Career In February 2010, Batuman published her first book, The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them, based on material she previously published in The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine, and N+1, which details her experiences as a comparative literature graduate student at Stanford University. Reviewing the book for The New York Times, critic Dwight Garner praised the "winsome and infectious delight she feels in the presence of literary genius and beauty." Batuman’s novel The Idiot is partly based on her own experiences attending Harvard in the mid-1990s and teaching English in Hungary in the summer of 1996. It was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Batuman was writer-in-residence at Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey, from 2010 to 2013. She now lives in New York. In 2016, she met her partner; she writes that this relationship, her first non-heterosexual one, "resulted in a series of changes to [her] views not just of gender but also of genre" as Batuman realized how influential film and narrative had been to her ideas about how women should behave. Batuman's 2018 article in The New Yorker on Japan's rental family industry won the National Magazine Award. In 2021, the magazine returned the award after an investigation revealed that three subjects in the essay had made false statements to Batuman and the magazine's fact-checkers. Influences Russian literature figures heavily in Batuman's work. Batuman says that her obsession with Russian literature began when she read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago in high school. Both The Possessed and The Idiot pay homage to Batuman's favorite Russian writer, Fyodor Dostoevsky. Personal life Batuman identifies as queer and stopped dating men at age 38. In an interview, she discussed reading Adrienne Rich's essay Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence after beginning to date her current partner, a woman, after a lifetime of dating only men, and how it related to certain behaviors by her protagonist Selin. Bibliography Novels The Idiot, Penguin Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1-594-20561-3. Either/Or, Penguin Press, 2022. ISBN 978-0525557593. Short fiction Stories Non-fiction Elif Batuman (Jan 16, 2006), "Cool Heart". The New Yorker. Batuman, Elif (February 2009). "The murder of Leo Tolstoy". Harper's. 318 (1905): 45–53. Batuman, Elif (2010). The possessed : adventures with Russian books and the people who read them. Macmillan. Elif Batuman (September 23, 2010). "Get a Real Degree". London Review of Books. Elif Batuman (December 31, 2010). "From the Critical Impulse, the Growth of Literature". The New York Times. Elif Batuman (April 21, 2011). "Elif Batuman: Life after a bestseller". The Guardian. Batuman, Elif (December 19–26, 2011). "Dept. of Archaeology: The Sanctuary". The New Yorker. 87 (41): 72–83. Göbekli Tepe Two Rivers. Carolyn Drake, self-published, 2013. ISBN 978-0-615-78764-0. Edition of 700 copies. By Carolyn Drake. Accompanied by a separate book with a short essay by Batuman and notes by Drake. — (April 6, 2015). "Electrified : adventures in transcranial direct-current stimulation". Annals of the Mind. The New Yorker. 91 (7): 24–32. "The Big Dig". The New Yorker. August 31, 2015. "The head scarf, modern Turkey, and me". The New Yorker. February 8–15, 2016. — (December 19–26, 2016). "Epictetus". Visionaries. The New Yorker. 92 (42): 84. "Japan's Rent-a-Family Industry". The New Yorker. April 30, 2018. Interviews Elif Batuman in conversation with Full Stop (December 14, 2011). "The books that made me" | "My stress read? Epictetus during a dental procedure", The Guardian (April 28, 2018). Elif Batuman on the Longform Podcast (June 6, 2018). Elif Batuman, interviewed by Yen Pham for White Review (June, 2017) Elif Batuman, interviewed by The Daily Stoic Elif Batuman, interviewed by Cecilia Barron for The College Hill Independent ——————— Notes Awards Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award, 2007. Whiting Award, 2010. Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, 2017. References External links Elif Batuman's personal website. Discover the Elif Batuman popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Elif Batuman books.

Best Seller Elif Batuman Books of 2024

  • Pleasure Principle synopsis, comments

    Pleasure Principle

    Madeleine Cravens

    An astonishing debut collection of poems about desire and the chaos of youth.In her stunning debut collection, Madeleine Cravens explores desire in all its transgressive power and ...

  • O lo uno o lo otro synopsis, comments

    O lo uno o lo otro

    Elif Batuman

    «Tiene un don para hacer que el universo parezca como ese seminario de literatura agudo y benévolo al que te gustaría acudir [...] Esta novela te conquista».Dwight Garner, The New ...

  • Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead synopsis, comments

    Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead

    Emily Austin

    In this “fun, pageturner of a novel” (Sarah Haywood, New York Times bestselling author) that’s perfect for fans of Mostly Dead Things and Goodbye, Vitamin, a morbidly anxious young...

  • La idiota synopsis, comments

    La idiota

    Elif Batuman

    El debut novelístico nominado al Pulitzer sobre el gran desafío que supone llegar a la edad adulta.Esta historia empieza en el año 1995, cuando el email era algo nuevo y emocionant...

  • The Sunlit Night synopsis, comments

    The Sunlit Night

    Rebecca Dinerstein Knight

    A "richly imagined and darkly comic" (Jenny Offill) love story set in the Arctic Circle that explores selfdiscovery and the power of starting over. Now a major motion pictu...

  • Hedda Gabler and Other Plays synopsis, comments

    Hedda Gabler and Other Plays

    Henrik Ibsen & Una Ellis-Fermor

    In these three unforgettably intense plays, Henrik Ibsen explores the problems of personal and social morality that he perceived in the world around him and, in particular, the com...

  • The Age of Innocence synopsis, comments

    The Age of Innocence

    Edith Wharton, Sarah Blackwood & Laura Dluzynski Quinn

    Edith Wharton’s masterpiece brings to life the grandeur and hypocrisy of a gilded age. Set among the very rich in 1870s New York, it tells the story of Newland Archer, a young lawy...

  • Days of Reading synopsis, comments

    Days of Reading

    Marcel Proust & John Sturrock

    In these inspiring essays about why we read, Proust explores all the pleasures and trials that we take from books, as well as explaining the beauty of Ruskin and his work, and the ...

  • The Idiot synopsis, comments

    The Idiot

    Elif Batuman

    A New York Times Book Review Notable Book  Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction  Longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction“Easily the funniest book I’...

  • Jonathan Abernathy You Are Kind synopsis, comments

    Jonathan Abernathy You Are Kind

    Molly Mcghee

    A Best Novel of 2023 Electric Literature and Largehearted Boy "The novel is a magicalrealist office drama infused with millennial anomie, and McGhee’s canny, often bittersweetly ...

  • Such Good Work synopsis, comments

    Such Good Work

    Johannes Lichtman

    From Johannes Lichtman comes a wisely comic debut novel about a teacher whose efforts to stay sober land him in Sweden, but the refugee crisis forces a very different kind of recko...