David Galef

Poet, Fiction Writer, Creative Nonfiction Writer

Montclair, NJ
New Jersey US
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Author's Bio

David Galef is an American fiction writer, critic, poet, translator, and essayist because he can’t seem to make up his mind what to specialize in, though he’s been a writer for over 40 years. He’s published over fifteen books, from novels and short story collections and children’s books to poetry books, criticism, and translation. A few highlights: His third novel, How to Cope with Suburban Stress, made Kirkus’ “Best Books of the Year.” His second short story collection, My Date with Neanderthal Woman, won Dzanc Books’ inaugural short story collection prize, and the title story was performed at Selected Shorts at Symphony Space. For a list of awards, publications, et cetera, see his CV.

David received a B.A. in English from Princeton, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in English from Columbia, with a specialty in British Modernism. From 1989 to 2008, he was a professor of English at the University of Mississippi in Oxford, where he administered the M.F.A. program in creative writing until 2007. In 2008, he received a Fulbright Fellowship to live in Tokyo for four months, after which he returned home, landed a job in New Jersey, and hopped back over the Mason-Dixon line. He is now a professor of English and the creative writing program director at Montclair State University.

David is married to the journalist and editor Beth Weinhouse. Their son, Daniel Galef, is a writer, too, God help him. David and his family live in Montclair, New Jersey, a cool, artsy community where you can’t throw a rock without hitting at least three writers.

Fun fact (at least some people find it fun): David has also been a humor columnist for Inside Higher Ed, where he wrote for years about a school called U of All People.

Publications & Prizes

Fiction

Anthology:
Even Monkeys Fall from Trees (Tuttle, 1987)
Books:
Brevity: A Flash Fiction Handbook (Columbia University Press, 2016)
,
Japanese Proverbs: Wit and Wisdom (C.E. Tuttle Company, 2012)
,
My Date with Neanderthal Woman (Dzanc Books, 2011)
,
Flaws (WordTech Editions, 2007)
,
20 over 40 (University Press of Mississippi, 2006)
,
How to Cope with Suburban Stress (Permanent Press, 2006)
,
Laugh Track (University of Mississippi Press, 2002)
,
Even a Stone Buddha Can Talk (Tuttle, 2000)
,
Second Thoughts: A Focus on Rereading (Wayne State University Press, 1998)
,
Turning Japanese (Permanent Press, 1998)
,
Tracks (Morrow, 1996)
,
Flesh (Permanent Press, 1995)
,
The Supporting Cast: A Study of Flat and Minor Characters (Penn State University Press, 1993)
Journals:
Crossroads
,
Formalist
, ,
Light
, , ,
Shenandoah
,
Subtropics
, ,
Yale Review

Poetry

Books:
Kanji Poems (WordTech Communications, 2015)
,
Flaws (WordTech Communications, 2007)
Chapbook:
Apocalypses (Finishing Line Press, 2009)
Prizes won: 

2017                Wigleaf Top 50 (Very) Short Fictions

2017                Meringoff Prize for Fiction, Association of Literary Scholars, Critics, and Writers

2015                Finalist, Best Short Stories from The Saturday Evening Post Great American Fiction Contest

2011                Finalist, Center for Book Arts Letterpress Chapbook Poetry Competition

2011                Finalist in Howard Nemerov Sonnet Award, judged by A. E. Stallings

2009                Dzanc Publishing Short Story Collection Contest Winner

2008                Fulbright Fellowship, Tokyo

2008                Sonora Review short short story award finalist, judged by Steve Almond

2007                Noemi Press Fiction Chapbook Award, judged by Ben Marcus

2006                Kirkus Reviews: Best 30 Books of 2006 for How to Cope with Suburban Stress

2006                Book Sense selection: How to Cope with Suburban Stress

2006                Featured Poet, Light magazine (Spring-Summer 2006)

2004                Finalist in Howard Nemerov Sonnet Award, judged by Rachel Hadas

1997-98           Mississippi Arts Council grant for literary arts

1991                Studies in Popular Culture Whatley Award:  best essay

1991                Writers Exchange award:  readings at the National Arts Club and Harvard University

1981-82           Henfield Foundation Grant

Personal Favorites

Favorite authors: 
too many to list

More Information

Gives readings: 
Yes
Travels for readings: 
Yes
Prefers to work with: 
Any, Teachers
Fluent in: 
English, Japanese
Born in: 
New York, NY
New York
Raised in: 
New York, NY
New York
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Last update: Sep 22, 2025