Born in suburban Detroit, USA Kristin FitzPatrick grew up surrounded by music and books. She fell in love with old movies, photography, endurance running, and poetry before she started writing seriously. Her inspiration has come from music and from the people she met while working as a stagehand, nanny, waitress, editorial assistant, and English conversation teacher. Kristin earned degrees from Michigan State, DePaul University in Chicago, and Cal State Fresno, where she began writing and publishing some of the stories in this collection. A semifinalist for the 2014 Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction, Kristin is the recipient of residencies from Jentel and The Seven Hills School in Cincinnati, where she held a creative writing teaching fellowship. Her work has been chosen for the Thomas Wolfe Fiction Prize and has appeared in publications such as Colorado Review, The Southeast Review, Epiphany, and The Best of Gival Press Short Stories, as well as on stage in Sacramento and Los Angeles. Kristin and her husband live in Southern California, among stacks of vinyl records and books. She's working on a novel and teaching writing to students whose stories inspire her to wake early, turn the volume up, and listen for more. My Pulse is an Earthquake is her first book.
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"My Pulse Is an Earthquake offers some of the most beautiful prose I've read in a long time, along with some of the most memorable characters. There's magic between these covers. I loved every word, and I'll be reading every word she writes from now on." Steve Yarbrough, author of The Realm of Last Chances "Kristin FitzPatrick has a gift for creating wholly formed worlds--simultaneously familiar and unique--that she invites us to enter while she spins out richly layered stories quite unlike any we've heard before. My Pulse Is an Earthquake is a truly masterful debut collection to settle into and savor." Stephanie G'Schwind, editor of Colorado Review "Bold and refreshingly original, this debut work of fiction is astonishing. FitzPatrick spins out intriguing and richly textured stories, and in doing so reveals the dreams and struggles of children, aspiring artists, and working-class adults. With compassion and insight, these interlinked stories help us fathom the extraordinary vividness of ordinary life."Laura Long, author of Out of Peel Tree

