logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Amanda Eyre Ward
ABOUT AMANDAAmanda Eyre Ward was born in New York City in 1972. Her family moved to Rye, New York when she was four. Amanda attended Kent School in Kent, CT, where she wrote for the Kent News.Amanda majored in English and American Studies at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. She... show more



ABOUT AMANDAAmanda Eyre Ward was born in New York City in 1972. Her family moved to Rye, New York when she was four. Amanda attended Kent School in Kent, CT, where she wrote for the Kent News.Amanda majored in English and American Studies at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. She studied fiction writing with Jim Shepard and spent her junior fall in coastal Kenya. She worked part-time at the Williamstown Public Library. After graduation, Amanda taught at Athens College in Greece for a year, and then moved to Missoula, Montana.Amanda studied fiction writing at the University of Montana with Bill Kittredge, Dierdre McNamer, Debra Earling, and Kevin Canty, receiving her MFA. After traveling to Egypt, she took a job at the University of Montana Mansfield Library, working in Inter Library Loan.In 1998, Amanda moved to Austin, Texas where she began working on Sleep Toward Heaven. She wrote for the Austin Chronicle and worked for a variety of Internet startups. In 1999, Amanda won third prize in the Austin Chronicle short story contest with her story Miss Montana's Wedding Day.She published Butte as in Beautiful that same year.In July, 2000, Amanda married the geologist Tip Meckel in Ouray, Colorado. They spent a summer in New Orleans, Louisiana, where Amanda wrote the short stories The Beginning of the Wrong Novel and Classified.During that summer, Amanda finished Sleep Toward Heaven, which was published in 2003. Sleep Toward Heaven won the Violet Crown Book Award and was optioned for film by Sandra Bullock and Fox Searchlight. To promote Sleep Toward Heaven, Amanda, her baby, and her mother Mary-Anne Westley traveled to London and Paris.Amanda moved to Waterville, Maine, where she wrote in an attic filled with books. Amanda's second novel, How to Be Lost, was published in 2004. How to Be Lost was selected as a Target Bookmarked pick, and has been published in fifteen countries.After one year in Maine and two years on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Amanda and her family returned to Austin, Texas.To research her third novel, Forgive Me, Amanda traveled with her sister, Liza Ward Bennigson, to Cape Town, South Africa. Forgive Me was published in 2007. Amanda's short story collection, Love Stories in This Town, was published in April, 2009. Her new novel, Close Your Eyes, will be published in July, 2011.Amanda currently writes every morning and spends afternoons with her two young boys.

show less
Amanda Eyre Ward's Books
Recently added on shelves
Amanda Eyre Ward's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
JDCMustReadBooks
JDCMustReadBooks rated it 8 years ago
By: Amanda Eyre Ward ISBN: 9781101887158 Publisher: Random House Publication Date: 2/21/2017 Format: Hardcover My Rating: 4 Stars Storyteller, Amanda Eyre Ward returns following (2015) The Same Sky with another thought-provoking and gripping tale of four wounded characters in THE NEARNESS O...
the dilemma of reading
the dilemma of reading rated it 8 years ago
Brilliant heart surgeon Suzette Kendall is stunned when Hyland, her husband of fifteen years, admits his yearning for a child. From the beginning they’d decided that having children was not an option, as Suzette feared passing along the genes that landed her mother in a mental institution. But Hylan...
debbiekrenzer
debbiekrenzer rated it 8 years ago
This was a story that will really challenge your emotional and moral standards. A couple after 15 years of marriage decide to have a baby. Unfortunately, they cannot have one together. So they decide to use a surrogate which costs them $35,000. The surrogate after 9 months decides she's going to kee...
My Never Ending List
My Never Ending List rated it 8 years ago
I thought this novel had the makings of a great story. The story itself was fascinating, there was enough drama to draw the reader in and keep them engaged as the story was captivating but I think it lacked on delivery. Suzette and Hyland decided to find a surrogate as Suzette was worried about her ...
Blah, Blah, Blah, Book Blog
Blah, Blah, Blah, Book Blog rated it 9 years ago
This is a story told in turns by two narrators: Alice, a forty-year-old woman who, despite her good fortune in life still finds it wanting, and Carla, a thirteen-year-old who knows more about wanting than Alice ever will. This story put me through the ringer – there is abject poverty, unrelenting sa...
see community reviews
Need help?