Daria snadowsky biography definition

          Daria Snadowsky began writing as a teenager, contributing to school and local publications during high school and college..

          Daria Snadowsky is the author of the novels "Anatomy of a Boyfriend" and "Anatomy of a Single Girl." She also contributed the essay "To Sir Anthony.

        1. Daria Snadowsky is the author of the novels "Anatomy of a Boyfriend" and "Anatomy of a Single Girl." She also contributed the essay "To Sir Anthony.
        2. Raised in Greenwich Village and Las Vegas, Daria Snadowsky has written for various publications, including Creative Loafing, Las Vegas Weekly, and Nevada Law.
        3. Daria Snadowsky began writing as a teenager, contributing to school and local publications during high school and college.
        4. In Daria Snadowsky's daring sequel to Anatomy of a Boyfriend, eighteen-year-old Dominique explores the relationship between love and lust.
        5. This is an engaging mystery in which books are both the problem and the solution, and the author shows that the fight to hold fast to your dreams rewards those.
        6. Snadowsky, Daria

          PERSONAL:

          Born in New York, NY. Education: Emory University, B.A., M.A. (with highest honors), 2001; University of Nevada, Las Vegas, J.D, 2006.

          ADDRESSES:

          Home—Las Vegas, NV.

          [email protected].

          CAREER:

          Writer. Admitted to Nevada bar.

          AWARDS, HONORS:

          Carl W. Tobias Excellence in Writing Award, William S. Boyd School of Law; Bookmarked Breakout Book, Target Brands, Inc., 2007, for Anatomy of a Boyfriend: A Novel.

          WRITINGS:

          Anatomy of a Boyfriend: A Novel, Delacorte Press (New York, NY), 2007.

          Also author of the blog Daria Snadowsky's Journal.

          SIDELIGHTS:

          Daria Snadowsky began writing as a teenager, contributing to school and local publications during high school and college.

          She tried her hand at writing a novel at the age of twenty-two, taking about a year to come up with a first draft, then another year to find an agent. Within one more year, Snadowsky received an offer on her manuscript from the Delacorte publishing house.

          Published