Discipline: Literature – nonfiction

Richard Goodman

Discipline: Literature – nonfiction
Region: New Orleans, LA
MacDowell Fellowships: 1993, 1995

Richard Goodman is the author of French Dirt: The Story of a Garden in the South of France. The San Francisco Chronicle said that French Dirt is “one of the most charming, perceptive and subtle books ever written about the French by an American.”

He is also the author of The Soul of Creative Writing, A New York Memoir and The Bicycle Diaries: One New Yorker’s Journey Through 9/11. The Bicycle Diaries is part of the permanent collection of the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

Goodman has written on a variety of subjects for many national publications, including the New York Times, Creative Nonfiction, Harvard Review, River Teeth, Chautauqua, Commonweal, Vanity Fair, The Writer’s Chronicle, Saveur, Louisville Review, Ascent, French Review and the Michigan Quarterly Review. His essay, “In Search of the Exact Word,” appears in the Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus. He wrote the Introduction for Travelers’ Tales Provence.

He is a winner of a Hopwood Award for his fiction. He has been awarded a fellowship at MacDowell two times and three times been awarded a fellowship at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. He wrote the introduction to The Electric Pencil: Drawings from Inside State Hospital No. 3 about the outsider artist Edward Deeds. He is a founding member of the New York Writers Workshop. Goodman is an assistant professor of creative nonfiction writing at the University of New Orleans.

Studios

Mansfield

Richard Goodman worked in the Mansfield studio.

The Helen Coolidge Mansfield Studio was donated by graduates of the Mansfield War Service Classes for Reconstruction Aides. Helen Mansfield helped found the New York MacDowell Club. The small, shingled frame structure with stone foundation was originally fronted on the west side by a neat white picket fence and gate, a garden, and a stone pathway…

Learn more