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Thursday, August 11, 2011

Lesley Hazleton Is Your 2011 Stranger Literature Genius

Posted by on Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 11:30 AM

LESLEY-500-4.jpg
  • Kelly O
Lesley Hazleton doesn't know this, but she wrote the book that convinced me Seattle was the place I wanted to live. When I worked at Borders, I picked up an advance copy of her book Driving to Detroit. I'm not sure why I chose that book to read (cars usually bore me to tears) but I know why I loved it. She uses a simple memoir concept—Hazleton drives to Detroit for a big auto show and visits important car-related sites along the way—as a framework on which to hang big ideas about America, and the death of a parent, and inspiration, and grieving.

But the thing that most struck me about the book was the way Hazleton wrote about her adopted home of Seattle. Hazleton's Seattle was shabby but beautiful, a hopeful, flawed gem poking out of the most beautiful landscapes on Earth. It doesn't figure hugely in the book, but those few offhand peeks at the city were enough for me to confirm that I wanted to try my luck there. I especially loved the way she described her houseboat on South Lake Union; like Seattle, it was a home that maybe worked better in theory than in reality, but she was committed to making it home.

Thirteen years after reading that book, I was part of a team of Stranger staffers delivering a sheet cake to that very same houseboat. Hazleton informed us we were making a mistake. "It's too soon," she said, suggesting that her best work is still ahead of her. We assured her that while her upcoming books will no doubt be brilliant, her career is plenty genius enough already. Finally, she accepted it: "This is a good day," she said, "Philip Levine was named Poet Laureate, and now this." (Levine, she told us, is a true "working-class" poet, as well as a "mensch.") Hazleton addressed her cat: "You see that? You're living with a frickin' genius." The cat seemed unimpressed. As Hazleton posed for photos and we explained that she'd be a guest at our big Genius party on September 16th, she worried that she'd have to shift out of her "hermit" mode—she's deep in the process of researching and writing a biography of Mohammad—but she was looking forward to the celebration.

Hazelton's career is much more than Driving to Detroit, of course. The majority of her work explores the engine that runs the world: religion.

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  • Kelly O
Hazleton has written books that explore the Palestinian-Israeli conflict (Jerusalem, Jerusalem: A Memoir of War and Peace, Passion and Politics), other ages-old divides that affect our world today (After the Prophet: The Epic Story of the Shia-Sunni Split) and biographies of religious figures (Jezebel: The Untold Story of the Bible's Harlot Queen, and Mary: A Flesh-and-Blood Biography of the Virgin Mother). She applies intellectual rigor and beautiful prose to them, wiping years of ignorance and disinformation from these symbols of worship and derision, introducing us to a more achingly human side. Her work is a perfect marriage between rigorous scholarship in search of truth and a heartfelt passion for the beauty of a good story. In other words, she's a frickin' genius.

You can come meet Hazleton at our Genius Awards party on September 16th. If you want to help support the Genius Awards, you can donate right here.

 

Comments (12) RSS

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1
well deserved!
Posted by sherpaco on August 11, 2011 at 11:51 AM
lark 2
I read her "After the Prophet". It's a pretty good study on Islam after the death of Mohammad and deals a lot with the Sunni/Shia division .
Posted by lark on August 11, 2011 at 11:54 AM
3
congrats to lesley hazelton
Posted by nv on August 11, 2011 at 11:54 AM
Just Jeff 4
The Cake Is A Lie (tm).
Posted by Just Jeff http://pstonews.wordpress.com on August 11, 2011 at 1:53 PM
thatsnotright 5
When Jean Rhys, one of my favorite writers, was notified that she won the Booker Prize for "The Wide Sargasso Sea" she is said to have remarked, "It comes to late." Her previous novels, which are now highly regarded, were ingored and she had lived for years in obscurity and sordid poverty and had not much longer to live. It is lovely to hear of someone for whom a prize is not too late.
Posted by thatsnotright on August 11, 2011 at 2:11 PM
COMTE 6
Just curious, but how do you decide who gets a chocolate cake?
Posted by COMTE http://www.chriscomte.com on August 11, 2011 at 3:00 PM
7
Brava, Leslie Hazleton. A well deserved honor.
Posted by annet on August 11, 2011 at 3:10 PM
Tracy 8
@6 Great question. I'd think this means that they love Lesley best
Posted by Tracy on August 11, 2011 at 3:39 PM
Mrs Jarvie 9
Ahh, more books for my wish list!
Posted by Mrs Jarvie on August 11, 2011 at 3:41 PM
10
You must have caught the cat in a self-absorbed moment. Lesley's work is beyond impressive. Congratulations!
Posted by Stacey on August 11, 2011 at 4:43 PM
11
Congrats to Lesley. I've had the pleasure of reading with her and can say this Genius Award was well-deserved.
Posted by Ryan Boudinot on August 11, 2011 at 9:04 PM
Kitts 12
I enjoyed After the Prophet quite a bit. I'm glad Lesley Hazleton won her well-deserved money and cake.
Posted by Kitts on August 12, 2011 at 10:38 AM

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