James Wilcox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Wilcox

Born: 1949
Hammond, LA
Occupation(s): novelist, professor
Genre(s): Literary fiction
Debut work(s): Modern Baptists

James Wilcox (b. 1949 in Hammond, Louisiana) is an American novelist and a professor at LSU in Baton Rouge.

Wilcox is the author of eight comic novels set in, or featuring characters from, the fictional town of Tula Springs, Louisiana. Wilcox's first book Modern Baptists (1983) remains his best known work. His other novels are North Gladiola (1985), Miss Undine's Living Room (1987), Sort of Rich (1989), Polite Sex (1991), Guest of a Sinner (1993), Plain and Normal (1998), and Heavenly Days (2003).

Wilcox's books have rarely been out of print but he has yet to write a bestseller. His work has received consistently fine reviews, although reader's opinions appear to be mixed judging by amazon.com.

Wilcox is also the author of three short stories that were published in The New Yorker between 1981 and 1986, three of only four short stories that the author has published. Wilcox has also written book reviews for The New York Times and The Los Angeles Times. He has also written two pieces for ELLE. He was the subject of an article in The New Yorker's 1994 summer fiction issue, entitled "Moby Dick in Manhattan", by James B. Stewart, which detailed his struggle to survive as a writer devoted purely to literary fiction.

Wilcox, a receiptent of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1986, has held the Robert Penn Warren Professorship at Louisiana State University since September 2004. He is also the director of the university's creative writing program.