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Joel Rose

American novelist

Joel Rose is an American novelist.

Contents

  • 1 Career
  • 2 Personal life
  • 3 References
  • 4 External links

Career

His novels include The Blackest Bird (2007), Kill the Poor (1988), and Kill Kill Faster Faster (1988). He also aut*d the urban historical, New York Sawed in Half: An Urban Historical (2001), and was editor of a collection that included work by Anthony Bourdain, Mat Johnson, Franz Lidz, and Jerry Stahl, among others.

His articles has appeared in magazines and newspapers including BlackBook, Bomb, Details, the Los Angeles Times, Marie Claire, New York, New York Newsday, The New York Times, and PAPER. He also established and co-edited (with Catherine Texier) the Lower East Side quarterly literary magazine Between C & D (1983–1990), and has written for several television shows, including Kojak and Miami Vice.

Kill the Poor and Kill Kill Faster Faster were made into films in 2003 and 2008, respectively, and Rose participated in the screen adaptation of the latter. Kill Kill Faster Faster (2008) won Best International Feature at the 2008 London Independent Film Festival, won Best Editing in a HD Feature Film and second place in Best High-Definition Feature at the 2008 HDFest, and won Best Independent Feature Film at 2008 Charity Erotic Awards.

Rose has edited and co-aut*d graphic novels for DC Comics, including La Pacifica (Paradox Press), written with Amos Poe with art by Tayyar Ozkan, and Get Jiro! (Vertigo Comics), written with Anthony Bourdain with art by Langdon Foss. Get Jiro! was a #1 New York Times Bestseller. A prequel to Get Jiro!, Get Jiro! Blood and Sushi was published in October 2015. Blood and Sushi was also a New York Times Bestseller. In 2018 Rose and Bourdain collaborated on the graphic novel Hungry Ghosts (Dark Horse Comics/Berger Books), based on the Edo period samurai game Hya*onogatari Kaidankai (100 Candles) with cover art by Paul Pope and interior work featuring Vanesa Del Rey, Sebastian Cabrol, Francesco Francavilla, Irene Koh, Leonardo Manco, Alberto Ponticelli, and Mateus Santolouco.

Rose's novels have been translated into 12 languages.

Personal life

Rose was married to his literary partner Catherine Texier, with whom he has two daughters. Texier do*ented the decline of their relationship in her memoir Breakup: The End of a Love Story (1998). Rose is now married to editor/publisher Karen Rinaldi. They have two sons.

References

    External links

    • Official website