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Encyclopedia
Beattie, AnnBeattie, Ann (bē'tē, bā'–) [key], 1947–, American writer, b. Washington, D.C. She gained attention in the early 1970s with short stories in The New Yorker magazine and won acclaim with the 1976 publication of her novel Chilly Scenes of Winter and her story collection Distortions, both chronicling with ironic wit the disillusionments of the upper-middle-class generation that came of age in the 1960s. Her keenly observed and dryly matter-of-fact early narratives of everyday life are often cast in the present tense. In her later work, especially that beginning in the 1990s, she largely concentrates on the same generation—grown older, more ruminative, but not happier—and their often listless progeny. In these works Beattie often employs a much less minimalist style and achieves a new emotional depth as she explores themes that include the sadnesses of middle age and the alienation of characters whose relationships and very lives seem inevitably to falter. Her other fiction includes the novels Falling in Place (1981), Picturing Will (1990), Another You (1995), and The Doctor's House (2002) and the short stories in The Burning House (1983), What Was Mine (1991), Park City (1998), Perfect Recall (2000), and Follies (2005). See studies by C. Murphy (1986) and J. B. Montresor, ed. (1993). The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. More on Ann Beattie from Fact Monster:
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