- Source: Alice Hoffman
Alice Hoffman (born March 16, 1952) is an American novelist and young-adult and children's writer, best known for her 1995 novel Practical Magic, which was adapted for a 1998 film of the same name. Many of her works fall into the genre of magic realism and contain elements of magic, irony, and non-standard romances and relationships.
Early life and education
Alice Hoffman was born in New York City and raised on Long Island, New York. Her grandmother was a Russian-Jewish immigrant. She graduated from Valley Stream North High School in 1969, and then from Adelphi University with a Bachelor of Arts. She was a Mirrielees Fellow at the Stanford University Creative Writing Center in 1973 and 1974, where she earned a Master of Arts in Creative Writing.
Career
When Hoffman was twenty-one and studying at Stanford, her first short story, "At the Drive-In", was published in Volume 3 of the literary magazine Fiction. Editor Ted Solotaroff contacted her, and asked whether she had a novel. At that point, she began writing her first novel, Property Of. It was published in 1977, by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, now a division of Macmillan Publishers. A section of Property Of was published in Solotaroff's literary magazine, American Review.
Hoffman's first job was at Doubleday, which later published two of her novels.
She was the recipient of a New Jersey Notable Book Award for Ice Queen. She won a Hammett Prize for Turtle Moon.
She wrote the screenplay for the 1983 film Independence Day, starring Kathleen Quinlan and Dianne Wiest.
In September 2019 Hoffman released The World That We Knew based on a true story told to her by a fan at a book signing. The woman confided to Hoffman that during World War 2, her Jewish parents had her live with non-Jewish people to escape the Nazis. These were known as "hidden children" and Hoffman thought about this woman and her unusual upbringing for years before deciding to travel to Europe and learn more.
The third novel in her "Practical Magic" series, Magic Lessons, was released in October 2020. This prequel takes place in the 17th century and explores the life of Maria Owens, the family matriarch.
For Scholastic Press, Hoffman has also written the young adult novels Indigo, Green Angel, and its sequel, Green Witch. With her son Wolfe Martin, she wrote the picture book Moondog.
In 2015, Hoffman donated her archives to her alma mater, Adelphi University.
Personal life
Hoffman resides in Boston. After being treated for breast cancer at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, she helped establish the hospital's Hoffman Breast Center.
Bibliography
= Novels
== Young adult novels
=Aquamarine (2001)
Indigo (2002)
Green Angel (2003)
Water Tales: Aquamarine & Indigo (omnibus edition) (2003)
The Foretelling (2005)
Incantation (2006)
Green Witch (sequel to Green Angel) (2010)
Green Heart (omnibus of Green Angel & Green Witch) (2012)
= Middle grade books
=Nightbird (2015)
= Children's books
=Fireflies: A Winter's Tale (illustrated by Wayne McLoughlin) (1999)
Horsefly (paintings by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher) (2000)
Moondog (with Wolfe Martin; illustrated by Yumi Heo) (2004)
= Short stories
=Conjure (2014)
= Nonfiction
=Survival Lessons (2013)
Filmography
Independence Day (1983) (writer)
Practical Magic (1998) (novel)
Sudbury (2004) (novel)
The River King (2005) (novel)
Aquamarine (2006) (novel)
The Dovekeepers (2014) (novel)
References
External links
Alice Hoffman's website
Alice Hoffman at IMDb
Alice Hoffman at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Jewish Women's Archive page
Radio Interview on WFMT's Writers on the Record with Victoria Lautman
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Putri duyung
- Aquamarine (film)
- Practical Magic
- Rudolf Caracciola
- Badai Remaja
- Click (film)
- Oprah's Book Club
- X (media sosial)
- New York Film Critics Circle Awards 1969
- Doubt (film 2008)
- Alice Hoffman
- Practical Magic (novel)
- Alice (name)
- Hoffman
- The Dovekeepers (novel)
- Aquamarine (film)
- Practical Magic
- Independence Day (1983 film)
- The Ice Queen
- Indigo (Hoffman novel)