Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

James Ross (American author)

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Name
  
James Ross

Role
  
Philosopher


Died
  
July 12, 2010, Little Compton, Rhode Island, United States

Education
  
University of Pennsylvania (1974), Brown University (1958), Catholic University of America (1954)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada

Books
  
Thought and World: The Hidd, Portraying analogy, Fabrication Instructions for a Van, Introduction to the Philosop, Philosophical Theology

Similar People
  
Thomas Aquinas, Immanuel Kant, Aristotle, Augustine of Hippo, Plato

Schools of thought
  
Analytic philosophy

James Ross (1911-1990) was an American fiction author. His only published book, They Don't Dance Much (1940), is an early example of what Daniel Woodrell identifies as "country noir", or a noir novel with a rural setting.

Contents

Life

James Ross was born in rural Stanly County, North Carolina in 1911. He briefly worked as a writer for the Savannah Morning News and then for the Greensboro Daily News (now News & Record), covering North Carolina politics and legislation. He died in 1990.

Ross's first novel was published in 1940. His follow-up novel, In The Red, was never published, and Ross turned to writing short fiction for magazines like Collier's, The Sewanee Review and Argosy. In 1970, he became a highly-regarded literary agent, and 1975 saw the reissue of They Don’t Dance Much, which saw the book become truly popular for the first time.

They Don't Dance Much

The novel is set in a Western North Carolina roadhouse in the fictional crossroads town of Corinth. It is narrated by a failed farmer who, upon taking a job at a filling station, becomes involved in a murder.

The novel, despite being praised by crime-fiction authors such as Raymond Chandler, William Gay, and Flannery O'Connor, has been largely forgotten. In part, this is due to its tumultuous publication history; since its release, the book has been printed by five different publishers, most recently by Mysterious Press.

References

James Ross (American author) Wikipedia