Hester Kaplan is the author of novels and story collections including The Edge of Marriage, winner of the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in literary journals and anthologies, including The Best American Short Stories series. She is the recipient of two NEA awards, and was named a Mark Twain Fellow for Twice Born.
""Written in a rich, evocative language . . . A daughter’s searching memoir, reflecting on the perils and promises of biography and the art of reading the self."" —Kirkus Reviews ""Hester Kaplan does with memoir what her acclaimed father Justin did with biography—finds the right subject, makes it new, and teaches us how to write with great compassion and grace."" —Annie Dillard, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Pilgrim at Tinker Creek ""Justin Kaplan was a brilliant biographer and a role model for many of us. In this intimate and unflinching look at her oh-so-private father, Hester Kaplan makes clear she has inherited Justin's genes for understated, artful and illuminating narrative."" —Larry Tye, author of Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon ""In this acutely observed, beautifully drawn portrait, Hester Kaplan searches for her eminent biographer father through his work—especially on Mark Twain—as well as through his silences, secrets, and her own vivid memories. And with deep imaginative empathy, she finds him."" —Jean Strouse, author of Family Romance: John Singer Sargent and the Wertheimers ""While the course of a life once lived cannot be changed, its meaning can be, and that magic happens here. A loving daughter draws on a deep well of feeling, and a skilled writer draws on hard-earned wisdom, to bring irresistibly to life the ingenious but wounded figures of her unforgotten father, of his greatest subject—and of Hester Kaplan herself, who is every bit their match. Exquisite biography. Heart-rending memoir. Twice born. Twice blest.” —James Carroll, author of An American Requiem ""A magnificent combination of memoir and biography, Twice Born is a work of reconciliation and a resurrection of the extraordinary man who gave us Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, and at last, through his daughter’s magic, his own passionate heart."" —Megan Marshall, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Margaret Fuller: A New American Life