Marian Thurm is the author of nine novels and five short story collections, including Today Is Not Your Day, a New York Times Editors' Choice. Her novel The Clairvoyant was a New York Times Notable Book. Her short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Michigan Quarterly Review, Narrative Magazine, The Southampton Review, and many other magazines, and have been included in The Best American Short Stories, and numerous other anthologies. Her books have been translated into Japanese, Swedish, Dutch, German, and Italian. She has taught creative writing at Yale University and Barnard College, and in the MFA programs at Columbia University and Brooklyn College.
""Marian Thurm writes with an authority that is always impressive…and that compels our innocent belief…She writes so brilliantly of the battle of the sexes.” New York Times Book Review “What is wonderful…are Thurm’s cold, clear eye and her perfect ear for the way people talk…As an observer and reporter, she is wickedly accurate, generously tolerant and wryly amused.” The Washington Post Book World “Exceptional…(Thurm) embraces the ironies and absurdities of the ordinary world and transforms them into a series of small epiphanies.” Newsday “Careful, assured, exact, she is a delight to read. She has a heart that is almost broken—‘almost’ because there’s humor and wit and a glimmer of hope.” Chicago Tribune “Eloquent…Thurm writes with such precision, such attention to psychological detail that she makes this world completely recognizable and true…We come to see her characters in the round, like beautifully shaped sculptures rather than as simple portraits in a frame.” The New York Times “Thurm hits the funny/sad spot every time, whether the subject is bereavement, divorce, betrayal, or some other form of abandonment... (She)…chronicles the frustrations and heartbreaks of contemporary domestic arrangements with a brilliantly light touch."" Kirkus Reviews (starred) “Marian Thurm is one of the most delightful writers around…the writing is gorgeous and the emotional truths and pains we all harbor are painfully explored and exposed.” The Providence Journal