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Anne Tyler

Anne Tyler's career as a writer spans fifty years and twenty novels including Breathing Lessons, The Accidental Tourist and 2015's A Spool of Blue Thread. She has won numerous awards including the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Critic Circle Award. ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Arts presents a selection of her interviews, and another chance to listen to Beginners Goodbye, first broadcast as a Book at Bedtime in May 2012.

From the archive

Anne Tyler

About the author

The characters are the driving forces behind the stories in Anne Tyler’s novels.

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She says: “I do make a point of writing down every imaginable facet of my characters before I begin a book, trying to get to know them so I can figure out how they’ll react in any situation".

“My reason for writing now is to live lives other than my own, and I do that by burrowing deeper and deeper… til I reach the center of those lives.”

Born in Minneapolis in 1941, Tyler grew up in North Carolina, moving to Maryland when she married. She began her first novel while working in the library at Duke University, where she had studied Russian literature. During this period she had short stories published in The New Yorker, The Saturday Evening Post, and Harpers.

If Morning Ever Comes was released in 1964, and her second novel The Tin Can Tree followed just a year later. It was the publication of Tyler’s ninth book in 1982, Dinner at the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔsick Restaurant that brought her national recognition in the United States.

John Updike wrote: “Her art needed only the darkening that would give her beautifully shaped sketches solidity… she has arrived at a new level of power.”

Dinner at the ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔsick Restaurant, which Tyler describes as her favourite book, was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Her next novel The Accidental Tourist was also nominated. It was later adapted into a film starring William Hurt, Kathleen Turner and Geena Davis. Tyler finally won the Pulitzer in 1988 with her eleventh book Breathing Lessons.

Tyler is a member of the American Academy of Art and Letters, and has lived for many years in Baltimore where her novels are set. Many anticipated her 2015 novel A Spool of Blue Thread to be her last, but she denies this.

Karen Holden, ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Readings Unit