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Jack Butler (author)

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Name
  
Jack Butler

Role
  
Writer

Education
  
University of Arkansas


Jack Butler (author) Meet Jack Butler Mud Flat Press


Books
  
Jujitsu for Christ, Living in Little Rock with Miss, Jack's skillet, Nightshade, West of Hollywood

Jack Butler (born 1944 in Alligator, Mississippi) is an American writer.

Contents

Jack Butler (author) Jacks bio author Jack Butler

Education

From 1964 to 1966, Butler attended Central Missouri State College, earning an English B.A. and a Math B.S.. From there, he attended the University of Arkansas and earned an M.F.A. in Creative Writing.

Career

During the 1980s, Butler wrote his first five books: West of Hollywood (1980), Hawk Gumbo and Other Stories (1982), The Kid Who Wanted to Be a Spaceman (1984), Jujitsu for Christ (1986), and Nightshade (1989). In 1993, Living in Little Rock With Miss Little Rock was published.

In 1988, Butler became assistant dean of Hendrix College and, in 1993, he became Director of Creative Writing at the College of Santa Fe (now Santa Fe University of Art and Design), from which he retired in 2004. While at the College of Santa Fe, he published two more books: Jack’s Skillet: Plain Talk and Some Recipes From a Guy in the Kitchen (1997, a cookbook) and Dreamer (1999). Publishers Weekly said Dreamer "...reads like a dream, in fact, intensely vivid, brimming with portent, serendipity and meaning. But it's as discursive and confusing as a dream, subordinating classic thriller elements to a semi-associational flow of events."

Since his retirement as a teacher, Butler has published a fifth novel, Practicing Zen without a License, has developed a mathematical theorem that declares the well-known Fibonnaci sequence is only one of an infinity of possible Fibbonaci sequences, and that these sequences in turn are only one of an infinity of Fibonacci-like sequences he refers to as "parafibs." He continues to paint and to write and publish poetry, fiction, and essays.

References

Jack Butler (author) Wikipedia