Jim Shepard Popular Books

Jim Shepard Biography & Facts

Jim Shepard (born 1956) is an American novelist and short story writer, who teaches creative writing and film at Williams College. Biography Shepard was born in Bridgeport, Connecticut. He received a B.A. at Trinity College in 1978 and an MFA from Brown University in 1980. He currently teaches creative writing and film at Williams College. His wife, Karen Shepard, is also a novelist. They are on the editorial board of the literary magazine The Common, based at Amherst College. Writing Shepard's work has been published in McSweeney's, Granta, The Atlantic Monthly, Esquire, Harper's, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, Triquarterly, and Playboy. His short story collection — Like You'd Understand, Anyway — won the Story Prize in 2007, and was nominated for a National Book Award in 2007. "Sans Farine" was included in The Best American Short Stories 2007. The novel Project X won the 2005 Massachusetts Book Award. Along with writing novels and short stories, Shepard has also drafted two screenplays, one about Kenneth Donaldson and the O'Connor v. Donaldson case, and the other a movie adaptation of Project X. Several features characterize Shepard's writings, including a tendency to finish his stories with what Charles Baxter called an "in medias res ending", or an ending in the middle of the plot's events; a thematic focus on what Shepard calls the "costs of certain kinds of ethical passivity"; and a preference for events-driven plots that fight against what Shepard terms "the tyranny of the epiphany", referencing the more psychological, less active plots popularized by short story writers such as James Joyce. Additionally, Shepard writes from the point of view of characters of a wide variety of nationalities. Shepard's stories often rely on substantial historical research based on real events. His 2007 collection Like You'd Understand Anyway includes stories about the Greek playwright Aeschylus, the Chernobyl disaster and the 1964 Alaska earthquake. The collection acknowledges over sixty non-fiction works that helped to shape the historical detail in the stories. Similarly, Shepard's 2011 collection You Think That's Bad also cites an extensive bibliography, including Avalanches and Snow Safety, The Japanese Earthquake of 1923, Climate Changes and Dutch Water Management, and Satanism and Witchcraft. His 2015 novel The Book of Aron involved extensive research into the Holocaust, which he called "critically important". Non c'è ritorno (66thand2nd; 2012) is a previously unpublished collection of Jim Shepard's short stories for the Italian market. Shepard is the winner of the Rea Award for the Short Story for 2016. Shepard adapted his short story The World to Come, along with novelist Ron Hansen, into a screenplay for the 2020 film of the same name, directed by Mona Fastvold. Bibliography Novels Flights (1983), ISBN 0-394-53265-1 Paper Doll (1987), ISBN 0-394-55519-8 Lights Out in the Reptile House (1990), ISBN 0-393-02784-8 Kiss of the Wolf (1994), ISBN 0-15-147279-3 Nosferatu (1998), ISBN 0-8032-9346-1 Project X (2004), ISBN 1-4000-4071-X The Book of Aron (2015) Phase Six (2021) Story collections Batting against Castro (1996) Love and Hydrogen (2004) Like You'd Understand, Anyway (2007) You Think That's Bad (2011) The World to Come (March 2017) Miscellaneous Editor, with Ron Hansen of You've Got to Read This: Contemporary American Writers Introduce Stories that Held Them in Awe (1994) Editor, with Amy Hempel of Unleashed: Poems by Writers' Dogs (1995) Editor, Writers at the Movies: Twenty-six Contemporary Authors Celebrate Twenty-six Memorable Movies References. Discover the Jim Shepard popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jim Shepard books.

Best Seller Jim Shepard Books of 2024

  • Up Up, Down Down synopsis, comments

    Up Up, Down Down

    Cheston Knapp

    In the tradition of John Jeremiah Sullivan and David Foster Wallace, Cheston Knapp’s Up Up, Down Down “is an always smart, often hilarious, and ultimately transcendent essay collec...

  • Naked City synopsis, comments

    Naked City

    Ellen Datlow

    Featuring original stories from 20 authors, this dark, captivating, fabulous and fantastical collection, Naked City, is not to be missed! Edited by awardwinning editor Ellen Datlow...

  • The Books That Changed My Life synopsis, comments

    The Books That Changed My Life

    Bethanne Patrick

    One hundred of today’s most prominent literary and cultural icons talk about the books that hold a special place in their heartsthat made them who they are today.Leading authors, p...

  • The World to Come synopsis, comments

    The World to Come

    Jim Shepard

    Bursting with wicked humor and driven by an incomparable understanding of what it means to be human, The World to Come is the inimitable work of “the most ambitious ...