![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() |
|
Kate Moses was born in San Francisco in 1962 to a British father and an American mother. She grew up in northern California, Philadelphia, the outskirts of Washington, D.C., and Alaska before returning to California to attend the University of the Pacific. Subsequently she worked as an editor at Berkeley's acclaimed North Point Press and as literary director of Intersection for the Arts in San Francisco. In 1997 she teamed up with journalist Camille Peri to found Salon.com's popular daily website "Mothers Who Think," which in turn inspired the nationally bestselling, American Book Award-winning anthology "Mothers Who Think: Tales of Real-Life Parenthood" (Villard 1999, Washington Square Press 2000). Kate is a contributor to the" Salon.com Reader's Guide to Contemporary Authors" edited by Laura Miller. She was an Affiliate Artist at Headlands Center for the Arts from 1995-98 and recipient of an Everett Helm Research Fellowship from the Lilly Library at Indiana University in 2000. Kate's feature stories "The Real Sylvia Plath" (2000) and "The Good Father" (1998) were both chosen for inclusion in the "Best Stories of the Year" listings by Salon.com. Kate is a trustee on the board of Children's Day School in San Francisco, the only school in San Francisco with its own herd of sheep. She lives in San Francisco with her family -- journalist and Salon.com Executive Editor Gary Kamiya, son Zachary, and daughter Celeste -- in a 1908 Edwardian house on Nob Hill.
More about Kate at Barnes & Noble's "Meet the Writers" site
Photos by Claire Lewis
|
|
![]() |
|
|||||
|
|
||||||||