| Robert Abel is
an American writer who has lived in China. Riding a Tiger is
one of the funniest books in Asia 2000's catalogue, a police
procedural 'written' by Arnold Fisher, an English teacher who has
gotten himself into serious trouble with the Beijing police.
Robert Abel has written two previous novels, Freedom
Dues, a comic historical novel, The Progress of a Fire,
about the Vietnam generation. He has also written three collections of stories:
Ghost Traps (which won the 1989 Flannery
O'Connor Short Fiction Award), Full-Tilt Boogie and Skin and
Bones.
He is a graduate of the University
of Massachusetts Writing Program and was awarded a National Endowment
for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship in 1978. He was born and
raised in the Midwest, where he spent several years as a college
instructor, editor and journalist. He now lives and writes full-time
in North Central Massachusetts.
Robert Abel worked in Beijing as a foreign expert in
1987, and taught literature at Beijing Foreign
Studies University in 1994. On his return to Beijing in 1997 (teaching
English again) he says he found Riding a Tiger seeming more
prophetic than fantastic.
Visit
Robert Abel's home page to learn more about his writing and artistic
interests.
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