Join Goodreads

to see if your friends have read any of Daniel Mason’s books

Sign Up Now
Photo of Daniel       Mason

Daniel Mason

Goodreads Author
2572 followers

Daniel Mason is a physician and author of The Piano Tuner (2002), A Far Country (2007), The Winter Soldier (2018), A Registry of My Passage Upon the Earth (2020)--a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize-- and North Woods (2023). His work has been translated into 28 More

Daniel Mason is a physician and author of The Piano Tuner (2002), A Far Country (2007), The Winter Soldier (2018), A Registry of My Passage Upon the Earth (2020)--a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize-- and North Woods (2023). His work has been translated into 28 languages, awarded a 2021 Guggenheim Fellowship, the Joyce Carol Oates Prize, the California Book Award, the Northern California Book Award, and a Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Piano Tuner was produced as an opera by Music Theatre Wales for the Royal Opera House in London, and adapted to the stage by Lifeline Theatre in Chicago. His short stories and essays have appeared in The Atlantic, Harper’s, Zoetrope: All Story, Zyzzyva, Narrative, and Lapham’s Quarterly, and have been awarded a Pushcart Prize, a National Magazine Award and an O. Henry Prize. An assistant professor in the Stanford University Department of Psychiatry, his research and teaching interests include the subjective experience of mental illness and the influence of literature, history, and culture on the practice of medicine. Less

Daniel Mason’s Books

Avg rating: 4.02 162,891 ratings 23,666 reviews
Similar authors More books by Daniel Mason

Related News

Readers’ Most Anticipated Books of Summer…and the Rest of the Year!

  It’s time once again, gentle reader, for our annual Big Books of Summer celebration, in which we offer a genre-sorted selection of the...
552 likes · 0 comments

Author Details

Born in The United States.
Official Website
Genre
Literature & Fiction
Member Since
September 2016

Quotes

the only way to understand the world as something other than a tale of loss is to see it as a tale of change.
I propose a new calendar: not one autumn but twelve, a hundred. The autumn when the birches are yellow but still have their leaves; when the beeches are green but the birch leaves have fallen; when the oaks tint to the color of ripe apricots and the beeches yellow; when the oaks turn a cigar brown and the beeches curl up into crispy copper rolls. And so on: I’ve missed a few. But to call it all just “autumn”!
she has found that the only way to understand the world as something other than a tale of loss is to see it as a tale of change.