Rachel Aviv

Rachel Aviv is an American writer and author. She is currently a staff writer with The New Yorker.[1]

Rachel Aviv at the 2022 National Book Festival

Aviv won a 2020 Whiting Award in creative non-fiction[2][3] and a 2010 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award. She has investigated Teen Challenge,[4] guardianship abuse,[5] and family courts.

Aviv graduated from Brown University in 2004.[6]

Her book Strangers to Ourselves was selected for The New York Times's "10 Best Books of 2022" list.[7] The book was a finalist for the 2023 National Book Critics Circle award in criticism.[8]

Bibliography

Books

  • Aviv, Rachel (2022). Strangers to ourselves : unsettled minds and the stories that make us. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9781473570184.

Essays and reporting

Critical studies and reviews of Aviv's work

Strangers to ourselves

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Notes
  1. Online version is titled "The philosopher of feelings".
  2. Online version is titled "How Elizabeth Loftus changed the meaning of memory".

References

  1. "Q&A: New Yorker's Rachel Aviv on making well-worn topics fresh". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  2. "Rachel Aviv". www.whiting.org. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  3. "Rachel Aviv". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  4. "How Rachel Aviv of The New Yorker exposed the "troubled teen industry"". Nieman Storyboard. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  5. "How the Elderly Lose Their Rights". The New Yorker. 2017-10-02. Retrieved 2022-08-31.
  6. "Complicated Truth". Brown Alumni Magazine. 2016-03-18. Retrieved 2022-10-16.
  7. "The 10 Best Books of 2022". The New York Times. November 29, 2022. Retrieved November 30, 2022.
  8. Varno, David (2023-02-01). "NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE ANNOUNCES FINALISTS FOR PUBLISHING YEAR 2022". National Book Critics Circle. Retrieved 2023-02-03.


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