Discipline: Literature – fiction

Mako Yoshikawa

Discipline: Literature – fiction
Region: Cambridge, MA
MacDowell Fellowships: 2001

Mako Yoshikawa is an American novelist. She is the author of two novels, One Hundred and One Ways (1999), a national bestseller that was also translated into six languages, and Once Removed (2003).

Her work includes personal essays that have won awards and appeared in important literary journals and anthologies including: The Missouri Review, Southern Indiana Review, Harvard Review, and Best American Essays 2013. Eds. Cheryl Strayed and Robert Atwan.

Yoshikawa grew up in Princeton, New Jersey but spent two years of her childhood in Tokyo, Japan. She received a B.A. in English literature from Columbia University, a Masters in Shakespeare and Renaissance Drama at Lincoln College, Oxford, and a Ph.D. in English literature from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is the recipient of the Vera M. Schuyler Fellowship at The Bunting Institute of Harvard University. She has also published scholarly essays on race and incest in American literature. She lives in the Boston area and is a professor of creative writing at Emerson College.

Studios

Heyward

Mako Yoshikawa worked in the Heyward studio.

The Lodge Annex, a wing on the west side of the men’s dormitory (The Lodge), was completed in 1926. Initially intended as an apartment for a caretaker, the space was soon repurposed as a live-in studio for writers. In recognition of a major endowment gift from the DuBose and Dorothy Heyward Foundation, Lodge Annex was…

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