Late Work

A Literary Autobiography of Love, Loss, and What I Was Reading

Published by UNM Press
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

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About The Book

Useful for writers at any stage of development, Late Work offers a seasoned artist's thinking through the exploration of issues, paradoxes, and crises of faith.

About The Author

Joan Frank is the award-winning author of twelve books of literary fiction and essays including Because You Have To: A Writing Life and Try to Get Lost: Essays on Travel and Place (UNM Press). She lives with her husband, playwright Bob Duxbury, in the North Bay Area of California.

Product Details

  • Publisher: UNM Press (October 15, 2022)
  • Length: 136 pages
  • ISBN13: 9780826364203

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Raves and Reviews

Questioning her assumptions (and ours as well), this vastly well-read author takes us through the slings and arrows of the literary life, arriving at a place of wisdom and sanity.--Phillip Lopate, author of To Show and to Tell: The Craft of Literary Nonfiction

Late Work gets to the heart of how a mature writer makes work that matters. At once wry, generous, and brutally honest, it is an essential guide for serious writers and readers of all ages.--Yang Huang, author of My Good Son: A Novel

Late Work gets to the heart of how a mature writer makes work that matters. At once wry, generous, and brutally honest, it is an essential guide for serious writers and readers of all ages.--Yang Huang, author of My Good Son: A Novel

The work of the writer, late and soon, is life itself . . . it's that simple, that difficult. Through analogy and example, Joan Frank's essays take us with her into a dimming world: to look, to feel, to cherish and forgive. This is a rich, real collection.--Carol Sklenicka, author of Alice Adams: Portrait of a Writer

Late Work is one of the best books on writing and the writing life I have ever read. It contains wonderful pages about the covenant between writer and reader along with advice for writers on how to use one's own 'skinlessness' as a creative tool. It is above all a book about art and the role, both tempering and freeing, that aging plays in an artist's life and work.--Joel Agee, author of The Stone World

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