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Carolyn Chute

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Name
  
Carolyn Chute

Role
  
Writer

Movies
  
The Beans of Egypt, Maine


Carolyn Chute New England writers at work Carolyn Chute The Boston Globe

Education
  
University of Southern Maine (1972–1978)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Books
  
The beans of Egypt - Maine, The School on Heart's Content, Letourneau's Used Auto Parts, Snow Man, Late Harvest

Similar People
  
Jennifer Warren, Wallace Stegner, Annie Dillard, Wendell Berry, William H Gass

Carolyn chute is living off grid she loves her rural home that she found as a wonderland


Carolyn Chute (born Carolyn Penny, June 14, 1947) is an American writer and populist political activist strongly identified with the culture of poor, rural western Maine. Rod Dreher, writing in The American Conservative, has referred to Chute as "a Maine novelist and gun enthusiast who, along with her illiterate husband, lives an aggressively unorthodox life in the Yankee backwoods."

Contents

Carolyn Chute gregrec Photo Keywords gregory rec

Writing place bonnie jo campbell and carolyn chute


Life and work

Carolyn Chute Carolyn Chute to discuss who knows what at North Berwick

Chute's first, and best known, novel, The Beans of Egypt, Maine, was published in 1985 and made into a 1994 film of the same name, directed by Jennifer Warren. Chute's next two books, Letourneau's Used Auto Parts (1988) and Merry Men (1994), are also set in the town of Egypt, Maine.

Carolyn Chute dgrassetscomauthors1283805945p5132984jpg

Her 1999 novel Snow Man deals with the underground militia movement, something that Chute has devoted more of her time to in recent years. She was the leader of a group which was known as the Second Maine Militia and is a fierce defender of the Second Amendment, keeping an AK-47 and a small cannon at her home in Maine. Chute also speaks out publicly about class issues in America and publishes "The Fringe," a monthly collection of in-depth political journalism, short stories, and intellectual commentary on current events. She once ran a satiric campaign for governor of Maine.

Carolyn Chute A Writer in a Living Novel The New York Times

In 2008, she published The School on Heart's Content Road, which deals with a polygamist compound in Maine under scrutiny after an article on them goes national. The project was originally a novel of more than 2,000 pages, which has since been broken up into a projected five-part cycle.

Carolyn Chute Book Review 39The School on Heart39s Content Road39 by

Her jobs have included waitress, chicken factory worker, hospital floor scrubber, shoe factory worker, potato farm worker, tutor, canvasser, teacher, social worker, and school bus driver, 1970s-1980s; part-time suburban correspondent, Portland Evening Express, Portland, Maine, 1976–81; instructor in creative writing, University of Southern Maine, Portland, 1985.

Carolyn Chute Treat Us Like Dogs and We Will Become Wolves by Carolyn

Chute is closely associated with the New England Literature Program, an alternative education program run by the University of Michigan's English department during the University's spring term. NELP students transcribed her 2008 novel The School on Heart's Content Road into an electronic format.

Carolyn Chute Carolyn Chute is living OffGrid She loves her rural home

Chute was born in 1947 in Portland, Maine. She now lives in Parsonsfield, Maine, near the New Hampshire border, in a home with no telephone, no computer, and no fax machine, and an outhouse in lieu of a working bathroom. She is married to Michael Chute, a local handyman who never learned to read. She has a daughter from a previous marriage, Joannah, and 3 grandchildren.

Awards

First prize for fiction, Green Mountain Workshop, Johnson, Vermont, 1977.

She has received a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Thornton Wilder Fellowship.

References

Carolyn Chute Wikipedia