| Born
in the US to immigrant parents from China, Amy Tan failed her mother’s
expectations that she become a doctor and concert pianist. Instead,
she settled on writing fiction. Her novels include The Joy Luck
Club, The Kitchen God's Wife, The Hundred Secret
Senses, The Bonesetter's Daughter, and Saving
Fish from Drowning, all New York Times bestsellers
and the recipient of various awards. She is also the author of a
memoir, The Opposite of Fate, two children’s books, The
Moon Lady and Sagwa, and numerous articles for magazines,
including The New Yorker, Harper’s Bazaar,
and National Geographic. Her work has been translated into
35 languages including Spanish, French, and Finnish to Chinese,
Arabic, and Hebrew.
Ms. Tan served as co-producer and co-screenwriter with Ron Bass
for the film adaptation of The Joy Luck Club. She was the
creative consultant for Sagwa, the Emmy-nominated television
series for children, which has aired worldwide, including in the
UK, Latin America, Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, and Singapore. Her
story in The New Yorker, “Immortal Heart,”
was performed on stages throughout the US and in France. Her essays
and stories are found in hundreds of anthologies and textbooks,
and they are assigned as “required reading” in many
high schools and universities. She appeared as herself in the animated
series “The Simpsons.” She performed as narrator with
the San Francisco Symphony and the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra playing
an original score for “Sagwa” by composer Nathan Wang.
Ms. Tan has lectured internationally at universities including Stanford,
Oxford, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Beijing University, and
Georgetown University both in Washington DC and at its School of
Foreign Service in Doha, Qatar. The National Endowment for the Arts
has chosen The Joy Luck Club for its 2007 “Big Read”
program. Ms. Tan also serves as the Literary Editor for the Los
Angeles Times magazine, West.
Her current work includes writing a new novel and creating, with
Stewart Wallace as composer, the libretto for The Bonesetter’s
Daughter, which premieres in September 2008 with the San Francisco
Opera. Ms. Tan’s other musical work for the stage is limited
to serving as lead rhythm dominatrix, backup singer, and second
tambourine with the literary garage band the Rock Bottom Remainders,
whose members include Stephen King, Dave Barry, and Scott Turow.
In spite of their dubious talent, their annual gigs have managed
to raise over a million dollars for literacy programs.
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