Benjamin Cheever

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Benjamin Cheever
Born Benjamin Hale Cheever
(1948-10-08) October 8, 1948 (age 75)
United States
Occupation Writer
Spouse(s) Janet Maslin
Parent(s) John Cheever
Relatives Susan Cheever (sister)

Benjamin Hale Cheever (born October 8, 1948) is an American writer and editor.[1] He is the son of Mary Winternitz and writer John Cheever[2] and brother of Susan Cheever. To date, he has written four adult fiction novels, one children's book, and two nonfiction books.[citation needed]

Works of fiction

  • The Plagiarist (Simon & Schuster Adult, 1992)
Synopsis—Arthur Prentice is the only child of author Icarus Prentice, a famous novelist. He's in a bad marriage and his son's unhappy. Arthur leaves his local job at a newspaper and joins the staff of The American Reader, a "reprint magazine" where the management tries to get Icarus to write for the magazine, but Icarus thinks the magazine is a joke.
  • The Partisan (Simon & Schuster Adult, 1994)
Was picked as Editor's Choice of The New York Times Best Books in its year.
Synopsis—Nelson is a young film student at New York University. In his life are his 'aunt and uncle,' Jonas Collingwood, author of eighteenth-century spectaculary gloomy novels, and his sister Nar (Narcissus). Nelson and his family live a cloistered life in the suburbs where Nelson dreams of owning his own car, uncle Jonas writing his novels, his aunt burning dinners, and Nar charming men and dreaming of owning a horse.
  • Famous After Death (Bloomsbury USA, 2000)
Synopsis—In 1984, Noel Hammersmith, a chubby thirty-something year old, gets dumped by his girlfriend. His dream is to be tall, skinny, and famous. He wants to be famous to the point where he thinks he might have to kill someone.
  • The Good Nanny (Bloomsbury USA, 2004)
Synopsis—Stuart Cross, an editor at a small publishing house and his wife Andie Wilde, a top film critic for the New York Post just bought a new house in the suburbs. They decide to Louise, a Nanny, also known as "Miss Washington" and "Sugar" to the children. Louise is a natural with the children. Nine-year-old Ginny and six-year-old Jane think of Louise as the ideal nanny, but Andie feels differently. Andie feels paranoid about Louise’s activities such as her enjoyment of reading Hilaire Belloc, being an accomplished painter and having a best friend who is a nice guy but has a prison history. While Andie feels displaced, Stuart suffers a professional blow and becomes annoyed when he learns about the Museum of Modern Art‘s interest in Louie's paintings.
  • The First Dog (2009)
Synopsis—This children's story is about Adam and Eve's dog who is the first dog to be known to humankind. Tim Grajek is the illustrator.

Works of non-fiction

  • Selling Ben Cheever: Back to Square One in a Service Economy (Bloomsbury USA, 2002)
Synopsis—Benjamin Cheever refers to himself as Ben and writes about the economic struggles of 1995 in the US. He wrote this book after he couldn't sell his latest work of fiction and started to think about other jobs he could have had.
  • Strides: Running Through History With an Unlikely Athlete (Rodale Books; 1st edition, 2007)
Synopsis—Cheever discovered running at the age of 28 during 1977 while working at the Reader's Digest. During this time, Cheever was going through an unhappy marriage and became involved with marathon running as a result. The book also covers past history of the sport.

Works edited

  • The Letters of John Cheever (Simon & Schuster Adult, 2009)
SynopsisJohn Cheever, father of Benjamin Cheever, was a novelist, short-story writer and winner of a Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award. John Cheever wrote letters to famous writers, family, friends, and lovers. He wrote about thirty letters a week which turned out to be thousands. These letters show John Cheever's development as a writer and a man.

Personal life

Benjamin lives in Pleasantville, New York, with his wife, The New York Times critic Janet Maslin. The couple has two sons and two dogs.[3]

References

  1. About Selling Ben Cheever: Back to Square One in a Service Economy
  2. The New York Times
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External links