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  1. Alma mater. Kenyon College. Paul Frederick Kluge (born 1942) is an American novelist. Kluge was raised in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey. [1] He graduated from Kenyon College in Gambier in 1964 and teaches creative writing there now. He served in the Peace Corps from 1967 to 1969 in Micronesia . He is the author of several novels, including Eddie ...

  2. P. F. Kluge. Region: New York, NY. MacDowell Fellowships: 1978, 1981. More: www.pfkluge.com. Paul Frederick Kluge is an American novelist living in Gambier, OH. He was born and raised in New Jersey and attended Kenyon College, where he now teaches creative writing. He also earned an M.A. and a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Chicago ...

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  4. That’s what I am, too. I’m the longtime Writer in Residence at Kenyon College. I work as a journalist, most recently and frequently for National Geographic Traveler. And I write books, seven novels – two more on the horizon — and two books of non-fiction. What it comes to is this: I live to write.

  5. Apr 11, 2021 · Currently, Kluge is working on a book called Wordman about writing and teaching. The title is a callback to a character in his novel, Eddie and the Cruisers. Kluge began writing early, working on grammar school and high school newspapers and holding summer internships during college at newspapers and Life Magazine. His interest in writing comes ...

  6. Nov 17, 2008 · In “Gone Tomorrow,” a sharply observed yet tender novel of academic life and its many sand traps, P. F. Kluge describes the dangers that a writer-teacher faces.

  7. Mar 25, 2012 · The main character in P. F. Kluge’s stingingly funny new novel, “The Master Blaster,” isn’t a person. It’s a location: Saipan, a very small island with a big, bizarre place in history.

  8. Nov 18, 2013 · They've both had him in class, and Kenyon College looms particularly large in many of Kluge's works. The book itself is part whodunit mystery, part love letter to New Jersey, and part tale of youth gone by. Join us for a discussion of all those things, plus more extensive chatter than usual about the author and his writing style.

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