Elizabeth Hartley Winthrop was born and raised in New York City. She earned her B.A. from Harvard University and her M.F.A. in fiction from the UC Irvine, where she was the recipient of the Schaeffer Writing Fellowship. She is the author of the novels Fireworks, December, The Why of Things, and The Mercy Seat. She lives in Massachusetts with her husband and daughter and is Associate Professor of English/Creative Writing at Endicott College.
Winthrop's new novel is Conviction.
Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Her reply:
I always have two books going at one, one of which I read, and one of which I listen to while running or driving. Right now I amVisit Elizabeth H. Winthrop's website.listening to John of John, by Douglas Stuart, although I plan to get a hard copy as soon as can; it is one of those books that I know I will come back to over and over again in an attempt to savor and understand the artistry and architecture. If I were reading it in hardcover, I can imagine making all sorts of notes in the margins, marking gorgeous or strikingly original turns of phrase, noting the lengthy passages of dialogue Stuart is able to sustain, tracing the trajectories of characters and relationships. The novel is a quiet, intimate, and ultimately stunning study of personality and place, driven propulsively forward by the inner conflict of its characters. I haven’t been this blown away by a book in some time.
At the same time, I am reading The Singer’s Gun, by Emily St. John Mandel. I came to Mandel’s work by way of her 2014 novel Station Eleven,which I deeply admire and have taught several times at the college where I teach. What I love most about Mandel’s writing is the wild imagination and the confidence it exudes. Mandel is not tentative; what she says, goes. She is willing to take risks, to bounce around in time, to make connections between characters (and books) that might, in another writer’s hands, seem far-fetched, but which Mandel can pull off perfectly. Unlike Stuart, Mandel’s books are driven by mystery and action (though her characters are also fully realized!)- but mystery that is subtle enough to require the reader’s participation in unravelling, which this reader finds deeply satisfying.
My Book, The Movie: Conviction.
--Marshal Zeringue

























