Joseph Salvatore
                Associate Professor of Writing
                
                    Email
                    joseph.salvatore@newschool.edu
                
                
                    Office Location
                    A - 66 West 12th Street
                
                
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         Profile 
	Joseph Salvatore is the author of the story collection To Assume A Pleasing Shape (BOA Editions, 2011) and the co-author of the college textbook Understanding English Grammar, 10/e (Pearson, 2015).  A Spanish translation of his story collection, Presentarse En Forma Grata, was published in 2018 by Editorial Dos Bigotes, Madrid, Spain.  He is Books Editor at The Brooklyn Rail and a frequent contributor to the New York Times Sunday Book Review.  His fiction has appeared in, among other places Minor Characters (Roundabout, 2021), Tiny Nightmares (Catapult, 2020), Writing the Virus (Outpost 19, 2020); The Collagist, Dossier, Epiphany, New York Tyrant, Open City, Post Road, Salt Hill, Sleeping Fish, Statorec, and Willow Springs.  His criticism has appeared in the Los Angeles Times; Rain Taxi; Routledge International Encyclopedia of Queer Culture; Angels of the Americlypse: an Anthology of New Latin@ Writing; 110 Stories: New York Writes After September 11; The Believer Logger, and elsewhere.  He is an associate professor of writing at The New School, where he received the University Distinguished Teaching Award and was the founding editor of the literary journal LIT.  He has taught writing at Eugene Lang and Parsons School of Design. He lives in Queens.
	www.josephsalvatore.com  @jasalvatore  @josephasalvatore
        
        
        
        
        
        
     
            
                            Creative Thesis & Lit. Project
                            NWRG 5920, Fall 2025
                        
                        
                            Creative Thesis & Lit. Project
                            NWRG 5920, Spring 2026
                        
                        
                            Creative Thesis & Lit. Project
                            NWRG 5920, Spring 2025