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Elizabeth Trembley

Contact me:
trembley@hope.edu
Website:
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TREMBLEY,
ELIZABETH, Associate Professor (1988).
Education: B.A., Hope College (1985); M.A., University of Chicago (1986); Ph.D., University of Chicago (1991).
Interests: Teaching writing (fiction, creative
nonfiction, memoir, essay and research); Popular Culture (especially
graphic novels and detective fiction); Learning and Thinking Styles;
and Faculty Development.
Selected Works: Contributor, Beyond Tests
and Quizzes: Creative Assessment in the College Classroom (2007); Contributor, Fresh
Water: Women Writing on the Great Lakes (2006--named a Michigan
Notable Book in 2007);
Michael Crichton: Critical Companions to Popular Contemporary
Writers (1996);
Co-editor, It's a Print: Detective Fiction from Page to Screen (1994);
Contributor, The Guide to U.S. Popular Culture (2001); Women
Three Times Three: Writers, Detectives, Readers (1995); Great
Women Mystery Writers: Classic to Contemporary (1994).
Distinctions: Certified Practitioner of the Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument, as applied to creative thinking, teaching, and learning.
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Publications: |
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Fresh
Water: Women Writing on the Great Lakes (Michigan
State University Press, 2006). Fresh Water: Women Writing on
the Great Lakes is a collection of nonfiction works by women writers.
These
works focus on the Midwest: living with the five interconnected freshwater
seas that we know as the Great Lakes. Contributing to this collection
are renowned poets, essayists, and fiction writers, all of whom write
about their own creative streams of consciousness, the fresh waters
of the Great Lakes, and the region's many rivers: Loraine Anderson,
Judith Arcana, Rachel Azima, Mary Blocksma, Gayle Boss, Sharon Dilworth,
Beth Ann Fennelly, Linda Nemec Foster, Gail Griffin, Rasma Haidri,
Aleta Karstad, Laura Kasischke, Janet Kauffman, Jacqueline Kolosov,
Susan Laidlaw, Lisa Lenzo, Linda Loomis, Anna Mills, Stephanie Mills,
Judith Minty, Anne-Marie Oomen, Rachael Perry, Susan Power, Donna
Seaman, Heather Sellers, Gail Louise Siegel, Sue William Silverman,
Claudia Skutar, Annick Smith, Leslie Stainton, Kathleen Stocking,
Judith Strasser, Alison Swan, Elizabeth A.Trembley, Jane Urquhart,
Diane Wakoski, and Leigh Allison Wilson.
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Michael Crichton: A Critical Companion (Westport
CT: Greenwood Press, 1996). Until this book,
Crichton’s many readers had nowhere to turn for scholarly information
on one of America’s most popular novelists. This companion
features clear analyses of Crichton’s life and literary influences,
as well as chapters on each of his first ten major novels.
It will help Crichton’s readers learn more about how events
in his life affected the development of his fiction and literary
style and how the heritage of popular fiction, including mystery,
gothic, adventure, and science fiction, influenced his writing.
This study provides a close textual analysis of each novel,
by focusing on plot, character development, theme and critical
interpretation. |
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with William
Reynolds, editors. Its a Print!: Detective Fiction
from Page to Screen (Bowling Green: Bowling Green State
University Popular Press, 1994).
The essays in this volume treat true cinematic
and television adaptations of works of detective fiction as
completely different products from films based loosely on the
gimmick or plot or character of a certain work. The essays
investigate the many ways in which fiction is transformed into
a new art form governed by its own rules and conventions. |
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