![]() ![]() Her debut novel, We Only Know So Much, was published by HarperPerennial in 2012 and a feature film adaptation is currently in postproduction for a 2016 release. She teaches in the UCR-Palm Desert low-residency MFA program. Crane is a recipient of the Chicago Public Library 21st Century Award, and her work has been adapted for the stage by Chicagos Steppenwolf Theater company, and also been adapted for film. When the Messenger is Hot, All This Heavenly Glory (both Little. ![]() ![]() Her stories have been featured on NPRs Selected Shorts. Elizabeth Crane is the author of the novel We Only Know So Much (HarperPerennial). Her work has been translated into several languages and has been featured in numerous publications including Other Voices, Nerve, Ecotone, Swink, Guernica, Coachella Review, Mississippi Review, Florida Review, Bat City Review, fivechapters, The Collagist, Make, Hobart, Rookie, Fairy Tale Review, failbetter, The Huffington Post, Eating Well, Chicago Magazine, the Chicago Reader and The Believer, and anthologies including Altared, The Show Ill Never Forget, The Best Underground Fiction, Who Can Save Us Now?, Brute Neighbors and Dzancs Best of the Web 20. Elizabeth Crane is the author of three collections of short stories, When the Messenger is Hot, All this Heavenly Glory, and You Must Be This Happy to Enter. Her life marked by such challenges as a best friend's betrayal, substance abuse, and the slow death of a parent, Charlotte Anne Byers navigates the turbulent waters of her career and the dating scene while working with an opera house children's choir. ![]()
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