Hanna Pylväinen | |
---|---|
Born | U.S. |
Occupation | Novelist, educator |
Citizenship | United States |
Alma mater |
Mount Holyoke College (BA) University of Michigan (MFA) |
Period | 2007 – present |
Notable works | We Sinners (2007) The End of Drum-Time (2023) |
Hanna Pylväinen is an American novelist and educator. She is on the faculty at the Warren Wilson College MFA for Writers. She was formerly an assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU).
Hanna Pylväinen grew up in suburban Detroit. Her family belonged to a conservative Finnish Lutheran church, a sect called Laestadianism. [1] Her maternal and paternal grandparents were from Finland. [2]
Pylväinen attended Mount Holyoke College and received a BA in 2007, [3] and she received a MFA from the University of Michigan. [4] She was a postgraduate Zell Fellow, awarded by the Zell Family Foundation. [5]
Her strict religious upbringing inspired her first novel, We Sinners, which follows the individual members of a large religious family as they grapple with their faith. [1] [6]
Her writing has also appeared in Harper's Magazine, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere. [7]
In 2023, her novel The End of Drum-Time was shortlisted for the National Book Award for Fiction. [8]
Hanna Pylväinen | |
---|---|
Born | U.S. |
Occupation | Novelist, educator |
Citizenship | United States |
Alma mater |
Mount Holyoke College (BA) University of Michigan (MFA) |
Period | 2007 – present |
Notable works | We Sinners (2007) The End of Drum-Time (2023) |
Hanna Pylväinen is an American novelist and educator. She is on the faculty at the Warren Wilson College MFA for Writers. She was formerly an assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU).
Hanna Pylväinen grew up in suburban Detroit. Her family belonged to a conservative Finnish Lutheran church, a sect called Laestadianism. [1] Her maternal and paternal grandparents were from Finland. [2]
Pylväinen attended Mount Holyoke College and received a BA in 2007, [3] and she received a MFA from the University of Michigan. [4] She was a postgraduate Zell Fellow, awarded by the Zell Family Foundation. [5]
Her strict religious upbringing inspired her first novel, We Sinners, which follows the individual members of a large religious family as they grapple with their faith. [1] [6]
Her writing has also appeared in Harper's Magazine, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere. [7]
In 2023, her novel The End of Drum-Time was shortlisted for the National Book Award for Fiction. [8]