Welcome to AnnaQuindlen.com, a web site dedicated to the life and work of the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and best-selling author. A few years ago, one of my brothers gave me a book called "Large Thinking" which is a collection of the New York Times "Public and Private" column. I saw the cover page in the afternoon, and I was fascinated.
Some people have gifts of expression, but Amna Quindlen is the best person among them. Whenever I read one of her columns, I climbed into my head, pulled out my chaotic idea, so that they make sense I rearranged it on the page. She is smart, persuasive and political. Both are very successful, dedicated to working with her family and career. In a nutshell, she is everything I am eager for.
Anna Quindlen is not always a famous writer, Anna Quindlen. First, she is the oldest Anna Marie Quindrain of five children in Philadelphia and later in New Jersey. She has one sister and three brothers, and all of them are younger than her, and her sisters are the youngest of the five. When Anna was 19 years old, her mother was an Italian lady and died of ovarian cancer at age 40. She uses this experience in most sentences such as "short hand to happy life". This made her only father and Irish man like almost any character in her book like "Object Course". As she was a teenager, Anna Kunderren was a feminist, and her reasoning changed a lot, but she is still alone. Anna is currently married to a man named Gerard Kurobatin and has three children.
Author Anna Marie Quindlen was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on July 8, 1952. When she was 18 years old, Anna Kundlen joined the New York Times. After graduating from Bernard University in 1974, she was hired as a reporter at the New York Post. She returned to the Times in 1977 and was appointed vice capital editor in 1983. As a columnist in The Times from 1981 to 1994, Quindlen was the third woman who wrote a regular column on the famous Op - Ed page in the history of the newspaper. Her column "Public and Private" was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1992. Other columns have "About New York" and "Life in the 1930s". In 1995, she left the newspaper and became a novelist.
Anna Kundlen was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on 8th July 1952, is the daughter of Prédant (1928-1972, née Pantano) and Robert Kundrun. Her father is an Irish American and his mother is an Italian American. Quindrene graduated from South Brunswick High School in South Brunswick, New Jersey in 1970, then graduated from Bernard University in 1974. She got married to New Jersey's famous lawyer Gerald Clovakin. Their sons Quindlen Krovatin and Christopher Krovatin are publishing writers, daughter Maria is an actress, a comedian and a writer.