Ada Calhoun
American non-fiction author / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ada Calhoun (born Ada Calhoun Schjeldahl; March 17, 1976) is an American nonfiction writer. She is the author of St. Marks Is Dead, a history of St. Mark's Place in East Village, Manhattan, New York; Wedding Toasts I’ll Never Give, a book of essays about marriage; Why We Can't Sleep, a book about Generation X women and their struggles, and Also a Poet, a memoir about her father and the poet Frank O’Hara. She has also been a critic, frequently contributing to The New York Times Book Review;[1] a co-author and ghostwriter,[2] the New York Times having reported that she collaborated on the 2023 Britney Spears memoir The Woman in Me;[3] and a freelance essayist and reporter. A Village Voice profile in 2015 said: "Her CV can seem as though it were cobbled together from the résumés of three ambitious journalists."[4]
Ada Calhoun | |
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Born | Ada Calhoun Schjeldahl (1976-03-17) March 17, 1976 (age 48) New York City, New York |
Occupation | Non-fiction writer, journalist |
Alma mater | Stuyvesant High School University of Texas at Austin |
Period | 1998–present |
Notable works | St. Marks Is Dead (2015), Wedding Toasts I’ll Never Give (2017), Why We Can't Sleep (2020), Also a Poet (2022) |