About

Short Bio: here.

Denne Michele Norris is the editor-in-chief of Electric Literature, winner of the 2022 Whiting Literary Magazine Prize. She is the first Black, openly trans woman to helm a major literary publication. A 2021 Out100 Honoree, her writing has been supported by MacDowell, Tin House, and the Kimbilio Center for African American Fiction, and appears in McSweeney's, American Short Fiction, and ZORA.

Her short story Last Rites appears in Everyday People: The Color of Life, an anthology published by Atria Books in 2018, and her story Daddy's Boy appears in the new anthology Forward: 21st Century Flash Fiction. Her fiction has twice been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and her story Where Every Boy is Known and Loved was a finalist for the 2018 Best Small Fictions Prize. She is a 2019 Peter Taylor Fellow at The Kenyon Review Fiction Workshop.

She is the former Fiction Editor for both Apogee Journal and The Rumpus, and is co-host of the critically-acclaimed podcast Food 4 Thot. Her debut novel, When The Harvest Comes, is forthcoming from Random House.*

*Inquire here

Happenings

Additional
Press &
Testimonials

Editor in Chief of Electric Literature:
EIC AnnouncementPublisher's Weekly InterviewThem

Food 4 Thot:
Gay Times UKBrooklyn MagazineNYTTime Magazine

“...Denne Michele Norris delivers a collection of queer short stories that read like a gospel, a prayer, like words that crackle and ignite and transform themselves with every consecutive read.”

T Kira Madden, author of
Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls

“It's an uncomfortable story, but it's written with a crisp spareness that's continued to haunt me from the first time I read it.”

Rion Amilcar Scott,
noting about Daddy’s Boy in SmokeLong