Biography

Although I grew up in Worcester, a small South African town in the shadow of the Brandwacht mountains, that wasn't the real me. The real me was best friends with Petunia, the North American goose who left her gooseprints in deep snow; Scuffy, the tugboat, who bumped up against logs and loggers as he floated down an East Coast river; and Madeleine, the little girl who lived right near the amazing Eiffel Tower. The South African skies, the mountains, the endless varieties of indigenous plants - all these things were intensely present in my life as a child and also entirely absent from the world of my imagination, where I lived.

Most of the children I went to school with were Afrikaans, had blonde hair and shockingly blue eyes. I was Jewish, my black hair curled in every direction and my nose was long. It added another layer of not belonging. And then there was apartheid, which was invented and established while I was growing up. I knew it was wrong, my parents knew it was wrong, but that's where we lived, that's where we had a house with a brass plaque on the front wall which read - Dr. G.B. Landsman, M.B.Ch.B., M.R.C.P. (Edin.) That's where we had loquat trees, and guava trees, a silver tree and a kumquat tree. I was always passionate about leaving. When I was very young, I believed London, Paris and New York were on the other side of the Brandwacht mountains because that's where I wanted them to be. I got the idea of leaving from my mother, who took me to the public library on hot afternoons. The idea of staying came from my father, whose plaque remained affixed to the wall in front of the house until the day he died.

Biography

Anne Landsman

I switched hemispheres when I was 21. I had just finished my undergraduate degree at the University of Cape Town. I wanted to see London and Paris and New York, finally. New York stole my soul. It was everything South Africa was not. There was no Nature to miss in the tangle of buildings and the experience of a thousand cultures rubbing up against each other. I went to Columbia University and graduated with an M.F.A. in screenwriting and directing. My writing career started with the writing of screenplays, under the eye of the late Frank Daniel, the best teacher I have ever had. That's where I began to think of writing about South Africa, the place I never read about as a child.

A short story I wrote which was published in the American Poetry Review became the prologue to my first novel, The Devil's Chimney. I then went on to adapt the novel for the screen, as well as teach writing myself. I also published essays, reviews and interviews and wrote a second novel, The Rowing Lesson, once again learning that some portion of my heart will always beat in that opposite hemisphere, in the shadow of the Brandwacht mountains, not far from the house with the loquat trees. Some part of me stayed down there.
I belong where I am not. 

- Anne Landsman

Curriculum Vitae

PUBLICATIONS
Novel: The Rowing Lesson, Soho Press, 2007. Foreign rights sold to Granta in the U.K., Kwela Books in South Africa
Awarded the 2009 Sunday Times Fiction Prize
Awarded the 2009 M-Net Literary Award for English fiction
Shortlisted for the $100,000 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature
Shortlisted for the 2008 Harold U. Ribalow Prize
Novel: The Devil's Chimney, Soho Press, 1997
Nominated for the PEN/Hemingway Award, the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize, QPB's New Voices Award, M-Net Book Prize (South Africa)
Trade paperback reprint edition, Penguin, 1999. United Kingdom edition, Granta, 1998
Other foreign editions: Germany, South Africa, the Netherlands, Norway 
and Denmark
Excerpts from The Devil's Chimney published in The American Poetry Review, 1994, Bomb, 1997

ESSAYS, REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS
"Imprints" in the anthology, Touch: Stories of Contact, Zebra Press, 2009
"The Baby" in the anthology, An Uncertain Inheritance, Harper Collins, 2006
"White Knight" in the anthology, The Honeymoon's Over, Warner Books, 2007
Interview with Breyten Breytenbach, The Believer magazine, November 2006
"The Quagga", The Believer magazine, October 2005
"The Auk, Great and Little", The Believer magazine, March 2005
"What Writers are Reading", Poets and Writers magazine, January/February 2002
Review of Arthur Japin's novel, The Two Hearts of Kwasi Boachi, The Washington Post, 2001  

SCREENPLAYS
Adaptation of The Devil's Chimney for Arena Pictures and Africa Media Entertainment, 1999-2001
Honest Arrogance, about the life of Frank Lloyd Wright, written with the help of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the New York State Council on the Arts, 1985/6
Workshopped at the Sundance Institute's annual June Lab, 1987

TEACHING
Columbia University, New York City. Adjunct Professor, 2010/2011
University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming. Creative Writing Workshop, May 2002
The New School for Social Research, New York City. Screenwriting Professor, 1993-2001
Borough of Manhattan Community College, New York City. Adjunct Professor, English Department, 1990-1993

RESIDENCIES AND FELLOWSHIPS
OMI International Arts Center, 2014
MacDowell Colony, 2006
Ucross Foundation as a PEN/Hemingway Fellow, 2003 
Corporation of Yaddo, 1991
MacDowell Colony, 1989
Sundance Institute, 1987
Columbia University, Writing Fellow, 1983-1984

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
Writers Room (Board member), New York Women in Film and Television, 
Authors Guild, PEN/America

EDUCATION
M.F.A. in screenwriting/directing, Columbia University, New York City, 1984
Received Honors. B.A. (Hons.), University of Cape Town, South Africa, 1980

Contact

For inquiries, please contact us at info@annelandsman.com.