Photo of Dayna Bateman by Susan Sabo

Dayna Bateman is a recovering tech worker (MSc, HCI) and an emerging writer. Her work has appeared in trade publications like Internet Retailing and literary journals like The American Literary Review.

About me and my work

I received the 2024 ALR Nonfiction Prize for my essay Deracination, Or How to Disappear, which interrogates the decision of my Indigenous Sámi ancestors to pass for White in the racial climate of 1880s America. An alum of the Tin House, Kenyon, and Granta Memoir Workshops, I was awarded a Storyknife Residency on the strength and promise of Hustling Vinyl, my memoir-in-progress about growing up on the spinning edge of the vinyl record business.

Projects in flight

I am seeking representation for my memoir Hustling Vinyl: How We Survived the Hype.

Reading Now

It has been said that reading is inhaling and writing is exhaling. Here’s what I’m reading now or just put down.

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