Katherine Vaz: In Conversation
Listening to Portuguese women, all March long
Katherine Vaz wears her Portuguese roots on her sleeve.
She is the first Portuguese American to have her work recorded by the Library of Congress and has been a Briggs-Copeland Fellow in Fiction at Harvard University - one of Harvard’s most prestigious fellowships for authors - as well as a Fellow of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
An acclaimed storyteller, Katherine Vaz has built a body of work recognized nationally and internationally. Her novel Mariana was published in six languages and selected by the Library of Congress as one of the Top Thirty International Books of 1998, and is currently in film development with Harrison Productions. Her debut novel, Saudade, was chosen as a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection, and her most recent novel, Above the Salt, was published in 2023 by Flatiron Books/Macmillan. Her story collection Fado & Other Stories received the Drue Heinz Literature Prize, and Our Lady of the Artichokes won a Prairie Schooner Award. Her work also includes The Love Life of an Assistant Animator & Other Stories and The Heart Is a Drowning Object, a multimedia collaboration with artist Isabel Pavão.
In addition to her fiction, her children’s stories have appeared in anthologies published by Viking, Penguin, and Simon & Schuster, and she won a national screenplay contest from the New York Film Academy and Writer’s Store based on one of her stories.
Her honors include a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, recognition as a Portuguese American Woman of the Year, an appointment to the six-person Presidential Delegation to Expo ’98 in Lisbon, and a 2022 citation by the Portuguese American Leadership Council of the U.S. as one of the most influential women of Lusa heritage.
Recently, she was featured on Primeira Pessoa, the primetime television program highlighting notable careers, with interviewer Fátima Campos Ferreira. Vaz is the first American selected for the show.
Read her full interview below:
What professional achievement are you most proud of, or a moment where you felt you advanced opportunities for women in your field?What is one piece of advice you would give to women at your career stage?Is there a book, tool, or resource that has helped you and that you’d recommend other women explore this month?