Sena Moon
Sena Moon is a South Korean writer and translator. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including Kenyon Review and Boulevard, and has won several prizes.[1][2] A graduate of the Helen Zell Writers' Program, she is a 2024–26 Stegner Fellow at Stanford University and considered an emerging fiction writer by PEN America.[3] CareerMoon is a graduate of the Helen Zell Writers' Program at the University of Michigan and a Stegner Fellow in poetry at Stanford University in the 2024–26 cohort.[2][4] Her fiction has appeared in Kenyon Review, Guernica, and others.[1][5] Her nonfiction has appeared in The Fiddlehead.[6] Moon has won several contests for her writing. In 2018, she won third place Glimmer Train's Short-Story Award for New Writer.[2] In 2019, Moon's short story "Homing Spoons" won Boulevard's Short Fiction Contest.[7] In 2020, Moon won the PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers for her short story, "Dog Dreams", which appeared first in Quarterly West.[8][9] It was subsequently published by Catapult in the anthology, Best Debut Short Stories 2020: The PEN America Dau Prize; in the anthology's introduction, editor Yuka Igarashi called it "beguiling".[2][10] As a recipient of the prize, Sena Moon has continued to receive support from PEN America as an emerging fiction writer.[11] In 2021, an excerpt of Moon's novel-in-progress, Familiar Strangers, won second place in the CRAFT Magazine First Chapters Contest.[12] In 2023, her short story "Slow and Then Fast" won the Carve Magazine Prose & Poetry Contest.[13] References
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