Nonfiction writer APRICOT IRVING will receive a 2011 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writer’s
Award, which is given annually to six women writers who demonstrate
excellence and promise in the early stages of their careers. Apricot spent part
of her youth in Haiti with
her parents, Jon
and Florence
(Flip) Anderson, volunteers with International Ministries
(IM) related programs. Former IM missionaries in Haiti, Bernice and Herb Rogers, served
together with the Andersons at the Good Samaratian
Hospital in Limbe.
Apricot’s (www.apricotirving.com) work in progress, The Missionary’s Daughter,
is about growing up on a missionary compound in Haiti. It is a deeply personal
story about her father’s work and devotion to the country and its people and
the personal toll it took on his family. It is also the larger story of Haiti and the
explorers and reformers that have shaped its history. She says, “Over the past
ten years, while living on three separate continents, I have struggled to
describe the ambitious, renegade hospital compound that I once called home. I
would tell of the missionaries’ jealousy and ambition, of their sacrifice and
longing, of the endless, unwinnable battle to save Haiti—this reformer's paradise,
colonist's bane.” Ms. Irving plans to use her Writer’s Award for writing
space and childcare, as well as to return to Haiti for an extended period to
re-immerse herself in the language and culture, “to re-absorb into the
bloodstream those elusive details” that she wants to capture in this book. Her
work has appeared on This
American Life and an excerpt
from her memoir will be published in More magazine later this year. She received
her B.A. from University of Tennessee-Knoxville and her M.A. in creative
nonfiction from Portland
State University.
She is a freelance writer and founder and director of Boise Voices Oral History
Project, a creative neighborhood response to gentrification. She lives with her
husband and two sons in Portland,
Oregon.
Celebrating its 17th year,
the Rona Jaffe Awards have helped many women build successful writing careers
by offering encouragement and financial support at a critical time. The Awards
of $25,000 each will be presented to the six recipients on September 22nd in New York City.
Celebrated novelist Rona Jaffe (1931-2005) established The Rona Jaffe
Foundation Writers’ Awards program in 1995. It is the only national literary
awards program of its kind dedicated to supporting women writers exclusively.
Since the program began, the Foundation has awarded more than $1 million to
emergent women writers, including several who have gone on to critical acclaim,
such as Elif Batuman, Eula Biss, Judy Budnitz, Lan Samantha Chang, Rebecca
Curtis, Rivka Galchen, Kathleen Graber, Frances Hwang, Aryn Kyle, ZZ Packer,
Tracy K. Smith, Mary Szybist, and Julia Whitty.
American Baptist International Ministries, organized in 1814, is the first Baptist Mission organization formed in North America. IM brings US and Puerto Rico churches together with global Christian partners in holistic ministries that meet human needs and help people come to Christ, grow in Christ and change their worlds with Christ.
