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Michael Chabon (born May 24, 1963) is an American author best known for his novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2001.
Chabon grew up in Columbia, Maryland and is of Jewish descent. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Pittsburgh and a Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing from the University of California, Irvine.
Chabon's parents divorced when he was about eleven years old; consequently, divorce, fatherhood, and single-parenthood would become frequent themes in his writing. Also, many of Chabon's novels contain Jewish characters and address issues of importance to American Jews such as assimilation and anti-Semitism.
Chabon currently lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife Ayelet Waldman, who is also an author, and their four children. She is his second wife; he was married briefly to a Seattle woman. He wrote of this first marriage in the anthology I Married My In-Laws (2006).
His first novel, The Mysteries of Pittsburgh appeared in 1988 and became a best seller; a movie adaptation, directed and with a screenplay by Rawson Marshall Thurber, is being filmed in Pittsburgh for 2007 release.http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06223/712694-254.stm (URL accessed 10/06/06) His subsequent works include Wonder Boys (1995), a novel about a frustrated novelist (based on Chabon's unsuccessful attempt at writing a much larger novel) which was made into a motion picture; The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, about an illustrator and a writer in the early comic book industry, which won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction; and Summerland (2002), a fantasy novel written for younger readers, which won the 2003 Mythopoeic Fantasy Award. In 2004, he wrote The Final Solution, a short novel about an investigation led by an unknown old man, whom the reader can guess to be Sherlock Holmes, during the final years of World War II. His works have been praised for their characterizations and complex use of the English language.
Chabon also has two collections of short stories, both of which came out after his debut novel, entitled Werewolves in their Youth and A Model World. His Dark Horse Comics project The Amazing Adventures of the Escapist, a quarterly anthology series, purports to cull stories from an involved, fictitious sixty-year history of the Escapist character created by the protagonists of Kavalier & Clay. It was awarded the 2005 Eisner Award for Best Anthology and a pair of Harvey Awards for Best Anthology and Best New Series.
Early in Chabon's career, some readers and critics mistakenly assumed that he was gay, due to the presence of gay characters in his first three novels. He mentions in the re-issued Mysteries of Pittsburgh that he has had some same-sex relations.http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18042
In the past, if interviewers brought up the subject of his sexual orientation, Chabon maintained that he was not gay. After Mysteries of Pittsburgh, Newsweek misidentified him as a gay writer. Chabon later told The New York Times that he was almost happy for the magazine's error. "I feel very lucky about all of that," he told the Times in 2000. "It really opened up a new readership to me, and a very loyal one." In a 2002 interview with MetroWeekly, Chabon said on this subject, "...if Mysteries of Pittsburgh is about anything in terms of human sexuality and identity, itâ??s that people canâ??t be put into categories all that easily."
Chabon has been writing a film adaptation of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, reportedly to be directed by Stephen Daldry, and is at work on Snow and the Seven for Disney, a live-action martial arts retelling of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to be directed by master Hong Kong fight choreographer and director Yuen Wo Ping
http://www.michaelchabon.com/works/ http://www.sugarbombs.com/kavalier/current.html http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000694195.
Chabon previously pitched story ideas for both the The Fantastic Fourhttp://www.michaelchabon.com/archives/2005/07/maybe_not_so_mu.html and X-Menhttp://www.michaelchabon.com/archives/2005/03/an_account_of_a.html movies, but was rejected. He also wrote a draft for Spider-Man 2, about a third of which was used in the final film.
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