Michael Mewshaw is an American author of 11 novels and 11 books of nonfiction, and works frequently as a travel writer, investigative reporter, book reviewer, and tennis reporter. His novel Year of the Gun was made into a film of the same name by John Frankenheimer in 1991. He is married with two sons. Alan Cheuse, National Public Radio's longtime "voice of books," has called him "the best novelist in America that nobody knows."
Background
Early life and education
Born in Washington, DC, and raised in the suburb of Prince George's County, Maryland, Mewshaw graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Maryland, College Park, then was granted a four-year fellowship to attend the graduate writing program at the University of Virginia, where he attained his Masters and Doctorate degrees under the tutelage of George Garrett. While studying at UVA, Mewshaw completed two unpublished novels, then embarked on a road trip across Mexico with his wife ; a journey which would form the basis of his first novel Man in Motion, which he completed while on a Fulbright Fellowship in France.
Early career
Mewshaw taught creative writing at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and subsequently was named Director of Creative writing at the University of Texas at Austin. Taking leaves of absence every other year from this post, Mewshaw based himself in Rome, Italy, and continued traveling throughout Europe and North Africa. While Mewshaw researched his third novel The Toll in Marrakesh, Morocco, his wife Linda was hired as Lindsay Wagner's stand-in on the set of Robert Wise's film Two People. Mewshaw's experience of that shoot was the jumping-off point for his fifth novel Land Without Shadow. , Rome, Italy, circa 1982
Novels
Man in Motion
Waking Slow
The Toll
Earthly Bread
Land Without Shadow
Year of the Gun
Blackballed
True Crime
Shelter from the Storm
Island Tempest
Lying with the Dead
Nonfiction
Life for Death
Short Circuit: Six Months on the Men's Professional Tennis Tour
Money to Burn
Playing Away
Ladies of the Court: Grace And Disgrace On The Women's Tennis Tour
Do I Owe You Something?: A Memoir of the Literary Life
If You Could See Me Now: A Chronicle of Identity and Adoption
Between Terror and Tourism: An Overland Trip Across North Africa
Sympathy for the Devil: Four Decades of Friendship with Gore Vidal