Elif Batuman


Elif Batuman is an American author, academic, and journalist. She is the author of a memoir, The Possessed, and a novel, The Idiot, which was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. She has written many widely read essays and articles, including a 2018 essay on Japan's rental family industry for The New Yorker.

Early life

Elif Batuman was born in New York City to Turkish parents, and grew up in New Jersey. She graduated from Harvard College, and received her doctorate in comparative literature from Stanford University. While in graduate school, Batuman studied the Uzbek language in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Her dissertation, The Windmill and the Giant: Double-Entry Bookkeeping in the Novel, is about the process of social research and solitary construction undertaken by novelists.

Career

In February 2010, Batuman published her first book, The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them, based on material she previously published in The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine, and n+1, which details her experiences as a graduate student. Her writing has been praised for the "winsome and infectious delight she feels in the presence of literary genius and beauty."
The Idiot is partly based on Batuman's own experiences attending Harvard in the mid-1990s and teaching English in Hungary in the summer of 1996.
Batuman was writer-in-residence at Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey,
from 2010 to 2013. She now lives in New York.

Influences

Russian literature figures heavily in Batuman's work. Batuman says that her obsession with Russian literature began when she read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago in high school. Both The Possessed and The Idiot pay homage to Batuman's favorite Russian writer, Fyodor Dostoevsky.

Books