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Allan Gurganus

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Novelist

Name
  
Allan Gurganus


Website
  
allangurganus.com

Occupation
  
Novelist

Movies
  
Roam Sweet Home

Allan Gurganus Allan Gurganus 12k for Public Speaking amp Appearances

Born
  
June 11, 1947 (age 76) (
1947-06-11
)
Rocky Mount, North Carolina

Notable work
  
Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All Local Souls

Education
  
University of Iowa (1975)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Nominations
  
PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction

People also search for
  
Burk Uzzle, Ellen Spiro, Craig Paull

Books
  
Oldest Living Confeder, Local Souls, Plays Well with Others, White People, The Practical Heart: Fo

Allan gurganus falling back in love with difficulty


Allan Gurganus is an American novelist, short story writer, and essayist whose work, which includes Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All and Local Souls, is often influenced by and set in his native North Carolina.

Contents

Allan Gurganus Pull up a chair WordTheatre returns with acclaimed

Writers on the fly allan gurganus


Biography

Allan Gurganus amoskeagjournalfileswordpresscom201207allan

Gurganus was born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. He first trained as a painter, studying at the University of Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. He served three years as a message decoder with the United States Navy during the Vietnam War, as a punishment for draft evasion, and began writing during his time on the USS Yorktown. He graduated from Sarah Lawrence College where he studied with Grace Paley. He studied with John Cheever, John Irving and Stanley Elkin at the University of Iowa in the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Cheever sold Gurganus's short story "Minor Heroism" to The New Yorker without telling Gurganus beforehand. It was the first story The New Yorker had ever published about a homosexual character (the magazine's founder Harold Ross had instructed his staff that there was no such thing as a homosexual).

Allan Gurganus Apr 7th Allan Gurganus amp Elizabeth Strout PEN

In addition to later teaching at both Sarah Lawrence and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, he has also taught at Stanford and Duke Universities.

His best known work is his 1989 debut novel, Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All, which was on the New York Times Best Seller list for eight months. It won the Sue Kaufman Prize from The American Academy of Arts and Letters, was a main selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club, and sold over four million copies. It was made into a CBS television play, with Cicely Tyson winning one of its four Emmy Awards as best supporting actress in the role of the freed slave Castalia. The novel was also adapted for a one-woman Broadway play, starring Ellen Burstyn, in 2003.

Gurganus's other works include White People, a collection of short stories and novellas; Plays Well with Others, a novel; and The Practical Heart, a collection of four novellas, which won a 2001 Lambda Literary Award in the Gay Men's Fiction category. His shorter fiction has been published in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, and The Paris Review, in addition to being included in the O. Henry Prize Collection and the Norton Anthology of Short Fiction.

After living in New York City for a number of years, Gurganus returned to North Carolina, where he co-founded the political group Writers Against Jesse Helms and, as a result, appeared as himself in Tim Kirkman's 1998 documentary Dear Jesse. Gurganus has also taken a position against the Iraq War, most notably by citing his Vietnam War experience in an essay published in The New York Times Magazine, "The War at Home", published April 6, 2003, a few weeks after the invasion. Gurganus was also the inaugural guest editor of New Stories From the South, an annual collection of notable fiction by Southern writers published by Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, in 2006.

He is the recipient of an Ingram Merrill Award and a 2006 Guggenheim fellowship.

References

Allan Gurganus Wikipedia