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Novelist Judith Grossman to Join UCI Faculty : Teaching: Author of ‘Her Own Terms’ will join Program in Writing in winter term of 1993, ending a long search.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

A long search for a writer to fill the second faculty teaching position in UC Irvine’s nationally acclaimed graduate Program in Writing has ended.

English-born novelist Judith Grossman has accepted the post and will begin teaching graduate and undergraduate creative writing in the 1993 winter quarter.

Grossman, author of the critically acclaimed 1988 novel “Her Own Terms,” has more than 25 years of experience teaching writing. She has conducted writing seminars at Johns Hopkins, Harvard and Brandeis universities and is on the faculty at Warren Wilson College in Swammanoa, N.C.

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“We are very fortunate that she is joining our program,” said James McMichael, professor of English and director of the Program in Writing. “Judith Grossman’s strengths as a teacher are unquestioned, and her written work is incomparable. And it is her skill as a first-rate writer of fiction that will be of greatest benefit to our students.”

Born in London, Grossman worked as a journalist in Liverpool before arriving in the United States in 1961. She received her bachelor’s degree in English from Somerville College, Oxford, and her master’s and doctoral degrees in English and American literature from Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass.

“Her Own Terms,” Grossman’s novel about an aspiring female poet coming of age in London and at Oxford University in the late ‘50s, was named by the New York Times as one of the outstanding books of 1988.

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It also was nominated for a Hemingway award.

Grossman joins Australian novelist Thomas Keneally, a 1991 appointee, as one of two fiction writing teachers in the Program in Writing.

The program’s poetry sequence is taught by McMichael and poet Michael Ryan.

Keneally and Grossman fill openings created by the retirement of longtime fiction writing teachers Donald Heiney and Oakley Hall.

Grossman was not available for comment, but in typically good-humored Aussie fashion, Keneally says of his new colleague’s impending arrival:

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“She is of English descent, so we’ve got the situation where supposedly the best writing program west of the Mississippi and the first or second in the United States is in the hands of an Aussie and a Brit.”

Keneally, the award-winning author of “Schindler’s List” and 11 other novels, said he’s looking forward to Grossman’s arrival because it will put the fiction program “up to strength again.”

The void left by the retirements of Hall and Heiney led to reports last year that the fiction program was in a state of disarray and that some of the writing students were demoralized.

The arrival of Keneally last fall helped allay concerns.

Noting that Bette Pesetsky, “a very distinguished novelist and short story writer,” is teaching the fiction workshop this quarter, Keneally said that “the morale is very high in the writing program, thank God.

“We’re right back on track morale-wise, and morale for writers is tremendously important.”

Among the nationally acclaimed writers spawned by the program are Michael Chabon (“The Mysteries of Pittsburgh”), Richard Ford (“Rock Springs”), Marti Leimbach (“Dying Young”) and Whitney Otto (“How to Make an American Quilt”).

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