Woiwode's debut novel, ''What I'm Going to Do, I Think
, won acclaim and the William Faulkner Foundation Award (1970) for the best first novel of 1969. He further received a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (1971–1972), two awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters - in 1980 the Arts and Letters Award and in 1995 the Award of Merit Medal, the John Dos Passos Prize for Literature (1990), the Aga Khan Prize for Fiction (1990), and a Lannan Literary Fellowship for Fiction (2002). Beyond the Bedroom Wall'' (1975) sold over 1,000,000 copies, and was a finalist for both the
National Book Award and the
National Book Critics Circle Award. Talking about the title of this novel, Woiwode told Alok Mishra in an interview that he wanted to suggest that a larger world of interest lay beyond the bedroom. It was because most of the novels of that time dealt with sex excessively. He published two dozen stories in The New Yorker. Born in
Carrington, North Dakota, Woiwode attended the
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign for four and a half years, where he worked with
John Frederick Nims and
Charles Shattuck, and after serving as copywriter and voice-over and live talent for a CBS affiliate in the area he left to live in
New York for five years. He returned to New York state after the death of
John Gardner, and took Gardner's position as director of the Creative Writing Program at
Binghamton University; he was a tenured full professor there, besides directing the Creative Writing Program. He spent several years living and working on short stories and his third novel in the Chicago area before returning to North Dakota in 1978, where he lived twelve miles outside
Mott and raised registered quarterhorses. Besides his tenure at Binghamton, he served as Writer in Residence at the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, and conducted summer sessions as a professor at
Wheaton College, Chicago, and the C.S. Lewis Seminars at Cambridge; he also conducted seminars and workshops in fourteen states of the U.S., all of the Canadian provinces but British Columbia, and in England, Lithuania, and Scandinavia. His work has been translated into a dozen languages, and Johnathan Yardley of The Washington Post Book World named
Beyond the Bedroom Wall one of the 20 best novels of the 20th Century. Woiwode published a dozen books in a variety of genres, six of which have been named notable books of the year by the
New York Times Book Review. Among his recent publications are two memoirs that were widely reviewed:
What I Think I Did and
A Step From Death. Woiwode taught at the
University of Jamestown and in 2020 was appointed Writer in Residence at the
University of Mary in
Bismarck, North Dakota, where he lectured and taught until his death. Woiwode died in Bismarck, North Dakota after a short illness on April 28, 2022, at age 80. ==Bibliography==