| Jonathan Carroll |
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| CATEGORIES ABOUT JONATHAN CARROLL | |
| 1949 births | |
| carroll, jonathan | |
| living people | |
| american novelists | |
| american short story writers | |
| american fantasy writers | |
| rutgers university alumni | |
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Carroll was born in New York City to Sidney Carroll, a film writer whose credits included '' The Hustler '', and June (née Sillman), an actress and lyricist who appeared in numerous Broadway shows and two films. His parents were Jewish but Carroll was raised in the Christian Science religion. A self-described "troubled teenager," he finished primary education at the Loomis School in Connecticut and graduated with honors from Rutgers University in 1971, marrying artist Beverly Schreiner in the same year. He relocated to Vienna , Austria a few years later and began teaching at the American International School , and has made his home in Austria ever since. His first novel, ''The Land of Laughs'' ( 1980 ), is indicative of his general style and subject matter. Told in a very realistic first-person, the novel portrays a young schoolteacher searching for meaning through researching the life of a favorite children's book author of his youth. Warmly, and strange to his expectations, greeted by the author's grown-up daughter, everything seems fine until the dog begins talking to him, as the line between the fantasy world created by his research subject and the reality of the schoolteacher's life, while the reader begins to wonder just how much trust can be placed in this narrator. Subsequent novels would expand on these themes, but often contain unreliable narrators in a world where magic is viewed as natural. (One commentator claimed that Carroll would have been considered a Magic Realist had he been born in South America and had a Spanish surname.) His short story, "Friend's Best Man," won a World Fantasy Award , and Carroll's work has frequently been short-listed for that award and the Bram Stoker Award for horror literature. His collection of short-stories, ''The Panic Hand'', won the Bram Stoker Award in 1995 for Best Fiction Collection. Both ''The Land of Laughs'' and ''From The Teeth of Angels'' won the French "Prix Imaginaire." ''Outside the Dog Museum'' won The British Fantasy Award for best novel. BIBLIOGRAPHY
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