- Source: Wendy C. Ortiz
Wendy C. Ortiz (born 1973) is an American essayist, creative nonfiction writer, fiction writer, psychotherapist, and poet.
Background
Wendy C. Ortiz was born in Los Angeles, California in 1973. She earned her Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Arts from The Evergreen State College in 1995 and lived in Olympia, Washington for eight years before returning to Los Angeles where she presently resides. While living in Olympia, Washington, Ortiz was a mudwrestler, library worker, and editor and publisher of 4th Street, a handbound literary journal.
Ortiz earned her Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing (2002) as well as her Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology (2010) from Antioch University in Los Angeles, California.
She was co-founder, curator and host of the Rhapsodomancy Reading Series, which began at the Good Luck Bar in Los Angeles in 2004 and continued through 2015. Ortiz was a Writer-in-Residence at Hedgebrook in 2007 and 2009. In 2015 she adapted a short play from her essay "Spell" in collaboration with and directed by Meera Menon for One Axe Productions. In Spring 2018, she served as visiting writer of creative nonfiction in the MFA Program at CalArts. Ortiz is a psychotherapist in private practice.
Works
Ortiz is the author of three books: Excavation: A Memoir, (Future Tense Books, 2014) Hollywood Notebook (Writ Large Press, 2015), and Bruja (Civil Coping Mechanisms, 2016). A second edition of Hollywood Notebook was published by CCM and WritLarge Press in 2018.
Critical reception
Amy Sachs at Bustle named Excavation: A Memoir one of "11 Groundbreaking Books About Women Making History With Their Thinking, Activism, And Courage" and JoAnna Novak at Bustle calls Ortiz, one of "9 Women Writers Who Are Breaking New Nonfiction Territory."
Of her books Excavation and Hollywood Notebook, Lesley Heiser at The Rumpus wrote, "With her bold books, Ortiz defies society to ignore her, to resist her. But we're becoming more and more aware of her. Her dark blossoming is changing us."
Of Hollywood Notebook, Jeva Lange at Electric Literature said, "The entire project becomes nearly reminiscent of the self-musings of Maggie Nelson, if Nelson were consulting astrological charts rather than philosophy…Hollywood Notebook, then, is a sui generis gem, and one to take advantage of immediately."
Ellie Robins at the Los Angeles Times called the prose in Bruja "spare and at times mesmerizing" and added, "Ortiz celebrates [the] dark side of the human mind, nowhere more so than in Bruja...It's testament to Ortiz's courage as a memoirist that she's willing to live for a while on this submarine plane, among the elements that dictate her fate — and to invite her readers along for the show."
My Dark Vanessa controversy
On January 19, 2020, Ortiz tweeted about a then-unpublished novel by Kate Elizabeth Russell titled My Dark Vanessa, saying: "can’t wait until February when a white woman’s book of fiction that sounds very much like Excavation is lauded, stephen king’s stamp of approval is touted, etc." Ortiz had not read Russell's book, but discussed Russell's alleged appropriation on Twitter with Roxane Gay. Gay subsequently published Ortiz's essay "Adventures in Publishing Outside the Gates," which alleged My Dark Vanessa bore "eerie story similarities" to Ortiz's memoir; the article began with an illustration of one artist copying another's work. The Associated Press has reported that "Reviewers who looked at both books saw no evidence of plagiarism." New York Magazine also said Ortiz's assertion of co-opting was unfounded. Nevertheless, in response to social media comments, and in the wake of the controversy over American Dirt, Oprah Winfrey rescinded her selection of My Dark Vanessa for her influential Book Club.
In 2023, Ortiz published a follow-up essay revisiting the controversy, in which she described the ostracization she experienced after making her allegations against Kate Elizabeth Russell three years earlier. Nevertheless, Ortiz has experienced subsequent literary success, including a Tin House residency and publication in BOMB.
Bibliography
Excavation: A Memoir, Future Tense Books, 2014.
Hollywood Notebook, Writ Large Press, 2015.
Bruja, Civil Coping Mechanisms, 2016.
References
External links
Official website
Rhapsodomancy homepage
Review of Excavation: A Memoir in the Los Angeles Times
Book Review of Hollywood Notebook in the Los Angeles Review of Books
Book Review of Bruja in the Los Angeles Times
Book Review in The Rumpus
Interview with Arielle Greenberg in Aster(ix) Journal
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