Kentucky and Kentuckians are full of stories, which may be why so many present-day writers have Kentucky roots. Whether they left and returned, like Wendell Berry and Bobbie Ann Mason, or adopted Kentucky as home, like James Still and Jim Wayne Miller, or grew up and left for good, like Michael Dorris and Barbara Kingsolver, they have one connection: Kentucky has influenced their writing and their lives. L. Elisabeth Beattie explores this influence in twenty intimate interviews.Conversations with Kentucky Writers was more than three years in the making, as Beattie traveled across the state and beyond to capture oral histories on tape. Her exhaustive knowledge of these authors helped her draw out personal revelations about their work, their lives, and the nature of writing. When Still concludes his interview with "I believe I've told you more than anybody," he could be speaking for any of Beattie's subjects.Aspiring writers will learn that Mason submitted twenty stories to the New Yorker before one was accepted, and that Still wrote articles for Sunday school magazines. There's plenty of advice: Dorris tells budding authors to get real jobs, keep journals, and read everything, even cereal boxes, and Marsha Norman reminds playwrights that "it is not the business of the theater to provide writers with a living." Kingsolver advises, "Read good stuff and write bad stuff until eventually what you're writing begins to approximate what you're reading."Beattie's collection includes striking self-portraits of such writers as Sue Grafton, Leon Driskell, James Baker Hall, Fenton Johnson, George Ella Lyon, Taylor McCafferty, Ed McClanahan, Sena Naslund, Chris Offutt, Lee Pennington, and Betty Layman Receveur.What most distinguishes these moving conversations from other author interviews is their focus on creativity, on the teaching of writing, and on the authors' strong sense of place.As Wade Hall writes in his foreword, all twenty writers recognize that their works have been significantly influenced by their "Kentucky experience." This collection offers insights into Kentucky's rich and flowering literary heritage.
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A series of interviews with twenty writers who hold some connection with Kentucky. Whether they left Kentucky and returned, as Wendell Berry did, or adopted the Commonwealth as home, like James Still, or grew up and left for good, like Barbara Kingsolver, they all felt Kentucky's influence.
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Beginnings of the Public Health Movement The Necropolitan South The Epidemic of 1878 The Quest for National Health Legislation The New Orleans Sanitary Association Tales of Romance from Memphis The Sanitary Question in Atlanta Public Health in the New South
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Delicious to dip in and out of and easy to browse with a good index, to see who mentions Daniel Boone and who mentions Mozart, to compare the entries for marriage with the entries for divorce, and just to enjoy the rustling of good sharp minds under the eaves of this house of writing. - Appalachian Journal
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780813190433
Publisert
2003-03-01
Utgiver
Vendor
The University Press of Kentucky
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, G, 05, 06, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
408

Foreword by
Filmed/photographed by

Biographical note

L. Elisabeth Beattie, writer-in-residence and associate professor of English at Midway College, is editor of Conversations with Kentucky Writers II and co-author of Sisters in Pain: Battered Women Fight Back.