Howard Junker (born 1940) is a writer, editor, and founder of the literary journal ZYZZYVA.
Howard Junker | |
---|---|
Born | 1940 (age 83–84) Port Washington, New York |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Writer and editor |
Years active | 1961- |
Known for | ZYZZYVA |
Early life and education
editHoward Junker was born in 1940 in Port Washington, NY, where his father taught high school shop and his mother was a primary school teacher. He graduated from Canterbury School, New Milford, CT, in 1957 and from Amherst College in 1961.[1] He was a Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford in 1970 and did a master’s in private school administration at the University of San Francisco in 1978. He served in the Naval Air Reserve as a sonarman.
Career
editAfter brief stints as a bookseller, a history teacher, and a documentary filmmaker, in 1965, Junker began writing for The Nation, Esquire, and Harper’s Bazaar. In the late Sixties, he was a swing writer in the arts sections of Newsweek. He later wrote for Architectural Digest, Art in America, Artforum, Film Quarterly, The New Republic, New York, Playboy, Rolling Stone, The Village Voice, and Vogue. In 1985, Junker founded the literary journal ZYZZYVA: The Last Word—West Coast Writers & Artists. In each issue he included some 30 images of works on paper in black & white and featured writers appearing in print for the first time, some 250 in all before he retired in 2010. He sold some 25 pages of ads, as a source of income and as a community bulletin board. Kay Ryan appeared in the second issue, Sherman Alexie while he was still in graduate school. First times in fiction included: F.X. Toole, whose stories inspired Million Dollar Baby, Po Bronson, and Chitra Divakaruni. And Haruki Murakami’s first time in English. And Frances Mayes’ notebook that led to Under the Tuscan Sun. And all the West Coast poets who became U.S. Poet Laureates, from Robert Hass to Kay Ryan, Philip Levine, Juan Felipe Herrera, Joy Harjo, with the exception of W.S. Merwin. (Junker's successor as editor, Laura Cogan, published Ada Limón.) He edited five anthologies of works published in ZYZZYVA, including AutoBioDiversity: True Stories (Heyday Books, Berkeley). His 24-volume metamemoir, A Total Junker, includes the oral history, Lord Jeff & The Closet: The Gay Scene, such as it was, circa Amherst, circa 1960 (revised edition, 2023, Mighty Fool Press, Bozeman, MT). His collaboration with artists Paul Kos and Isabelle Sorrell was recently on view at Anglim/Trimble in San Francisco. Junker lives in San Francisco with his wife, Rozanne Enerson Junker, author of Renatus’ Kayak.
Selected bibliography
edit- Junker, Howard (1991). Roots and Branches: Contemporary Essays By West Coast Writers. San Francisco: Mercury House. ISBN 978-1-56279-014-1.
- Junker, Howard (1995). The Writer's Notebook. San Francisco: HarperCollinsWest. ISBN 978-0-06-258618-6.
- Junker, Howard (1995). Strange Attraction: The Best of Ten Years of ZYZZYVA. Reno: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 978-0-87417-275-1.
- Junker, Howard (1999). Lucky Break: How I Became A Writer. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-325-00156-2.
- Junker, Howard (2005). AutoBioDiversity: True Stories from ZYZZYVA. Berkeley, CA: Heyday. ISBN 978-1-59714-007-2.
- Junker, Howard (2011). An Old Junker. San Francisco: IF SF Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4537-1719-6.
References
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