Anne Trubek (born 1966) is an author and founder and director of Belt Magazine. She has written The History and Uncertain Future of Handwriting, and A SkepticâÂÂs Guide to Writersâ Houses.
She co-edited Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology and edited Voices from the Rust Belt. Rust Belt Chic became serialized as Belt Magazine, a web publication and the first publication from Belt Publishing. Since Trubek founded it as a membership-driven nonprofit in 2013, Belt Publishing has brought out essay collections, guidebooks, and fiction about the culture and landscapes of the Midwest, developing a reputation for combining a regional focus with political and intellectual seriousness and a sense of literary history. Trubek also publishes articles about the Midwest in other media, as for instance her 2016 essay in The Atlantic on her "low-overhead life" in the Midwest, an article that was a response to Neal Gabler's essay on his own troubled finances.
Trubek was a professor of rhetoric and composition at Oberlin College between 1997 and 2015, and then began freelance writing to earn more money. She was a literary columnist for GOOD Magazine. Trubek's works are often concerned with the social history of widespread aspects of reading and writing, including the history of handwritingâÂÂshe was an early advocate of phasing out the teaching of cursiveâÂÂthe emergence of paperback novels, and the trend toward making popular writersâ houses into museums.
Trubek is from Madison, Wisconsin. She attended Oberlin College. She has been divorced since 2002 and has one son.