Lily Burana
Lily Burana is an American writer whose publications include the memoir I Love a Man in Uniform: A Memoir of Love, War, and Other Battles (Weinstein Books, 2009), the novel Try (St. Martin's Press, 2006) and Strip City: A Stripper's Farewell Journey Across America (Miramax Books, 2001).
I Love a Man in Uniform won the ELLE Magazine Reader's Prize in May 2009.
Strip City was named one of the Best Books of the Year by Entertainment Weekly, Salon, New York Newsday, and The Rocky Mountain News. In 2008, Entertainment Weekly published a feature called "So You Want to Write a Memoir," which indexed a thousand recent memoirs by subject. Strip City was among ten memoirs cited for their singular quality: "Whatever you might expect from a cross-country stripping odyssey, this surely isn't it. For one thing, Burana's eloquent, thoughtful goodbye to her longtime craft of bump-and-grind is decidedly unsexy. For another, her experiences frame a sort of social history of strip clubs and the girls who work at them."
As a journalist, Burana frequently writes about culture, gender, and women's issues, with a recent emphasis on the domestic side of military affairs. She has written for the Washington Post, GQ, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Self, Glamour, Entertainment Weekly, Details, the Village Voice, and the New York Observer. She was a contributing editor at New York Magazine and SPIN. As a public speaker, she has appeared at The United States Military Academy, Columbia University, San Francisco State University, and the San Francisco Art Institute.
Personal
Lily Burana started writing for punk magazines while still a teenager. Her first book, Strip City: A Stripper's Farewell Journey Across America was a chronicle of her work as a stripper during her late teens and early twenties.[1] Burana married an Army officer in 2002. In 2008, she began "Operation Bombshell," a burlesque class for wives of deployed soldiers.[2]
She lives in New York, and had her first child in 2014, who was baptised a Catholic.[3]
References
- ↑ Dao, James (December 28, 2009). "'To Keep Home Fires Burning, Grab That Boa'". New York Times. New York. Retrieved December 28, 2009.
- ↑ Dao, James (December 28, 2009). "'Glamour as Pain Relief'". New York Times. New York. Retrieved December 28, 2009.
- ↑ Lily Burana (2015-01-18). "This is my blood: Why a former punk rocker agreed to raise her daughter Catholic". Salon.
External links
- Media related to Lily Burana at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- Lily Burana's blog
- New York Times Op-Ed about the Army combat uniform.
- Los Angeles Times Op-Ed about the privacy debate at Dover AFB
- New York Magazine articles by Lily Burana