Sarah Chihaya is an American writer, professor, and literary critic. In 2020, she was one of several co-authors of The Ferrante Letters: An Experiment in Collective Criticism, published by Columbia University Press.[1] In 2025, she released her debut memoir, Bibliophobia, with Random House.[2]

Early life and education

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Chihaya grew up in Ohio as the child of Japanese and Japanese-Canadian immigrants.[3]

Career

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Chihaya's book reviews, interviews, and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Nation, The Yale Review, and other publications.[4][5][6][7][8]

Chihaya has served as an English professor at Princeton University.[9][10] She has also taught at the University of California, Berkeley and New York University.[11]

In 2020, Chihaya was the co-author of The Ferrante Letters: An Experiment in Collective Criticism alongside Merve Emre, Katherine Hill, and Juno Jill Richards.[12] The book was published by Columbia University Press.[1]

In 2023, Chihaya had earned a Whiting Award in Creative Nonfiction for her then-forthcoming debut memoir Bibliophobia. The judges stated: "Soul-baring, witty, and slyly provocative, Bibliophobia unsettles our most widespread and unexamined beliefs about books and reading."[13]

In 2025, Chihaya released Bibliophobia, which discusses her complicated relationships to books along with several difficult experiences in her life.[14] The New Republic called it "a welcome splash of lemony sourness to cut the bland sweetness of much popular discourse about books, which can tend toward boosterism, bibliotherapy, or... a nostalgic relation to books as objects and symbols that sometimes has little to do with the actual practice of reading."[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b Waldman, Katy (2020-02-06). "A New Book on Elena Ferrante Rethinks What Criticism Can Be". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  2. ^ Rothfeld, Becca (2025-01-31). "A life nearly wrecked — and then rescued — by books". The Washington Post.
  3. ^ Arterian, Diana (2025-02-06). "The Annotated Nightstand: What Sarah Chihaya Is Reading Now, and Next". Literary Hub. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  4. ^ Chihaya, Sarah (2024-06-19). "When the Apocalypse Is Just Another Day". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  5. ^ McKeon, Lucy; Chihaya, Sarah (2021-04-24). "What We Want When We Read". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  6. ^ "Seeing and Being Seen: A Conversation with Adrian Tomine". Los Angeles Review of Books. 2018-03-24. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  7. ^ Chihaya, Sarah (2024-08-01). "The Uncanny Brilliance of Helen Oyeyemi". ISSN 0027-8378. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  8. ^ "Sarah Chihaya: "A Glass Essay"". The Yale Review. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  9. ^ Harness, Susan Devan (2025-02-11). "To Write about the Way You Read is to Write about the Way You Live: A Conversation with Sarah Chihaya". The Rumpus. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  10. ^ Martin, Kristen (2025-01-31). "In Search of the Book That Would Save Her Life". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  11. ^ "Sarah Chihaya on Reading as Creative Act". Literary Hub. 2025-02-10. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  12. ^ "An Experiment in Reading Elena Ferrante". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  13. ^ "Sarah Chihaya | Whiting Foundation". www.whiting.org. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  14. ^ Kachka, Boris (2025-02-07). "A New, Unbearably Honest Kind of Writing". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
  15. ^ "The Books That Ruin Your Life". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 2025-02-15.