Jim Grimsley

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Jim Grimsley
Born: 1955
Occupation: novelist, playwright
Nationality: Flag of United States American

Jim Grimsley (born 1955) is an American novelist and playwright.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born to a troubled rural family in Pollocksville, North Carolina[1], Grimsley said of his childhood that "for us in the South, the family is a field where craziness grows like weeds". [2]

After moving to Atlanta he would spend nearly twenty years as a secretary at Atlanta's Grady Memorial Hospital before joining the creative-writing faculty at Emory University. During those years, Grimsley wrote prolifically, with fourteen of his plays produced between 1983 and 1993.

[edit] Writing

His initial forays into novel writing were less successful; the semiautobiographical Winter Birds was rejected as "too dark" by American publishers for ten years before appearing in a German edition; it only appeared in English two years later. The novel then brought Grimsley much recognition: the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a PEN/Hemingway Award citation. It was followed by Dream Boy which received the American Library Association's Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Book Award for Literature (Stonewall Book Award), and My Drowning, which won the Lila Wallace-Readers Digest Writers' Award. Subsequently he wrote the high fantasy novel Kirith Kirin, which won the Lambda Literary Award, or Lammy, for best gay-themed science fiction or fantasy for the year 2000. Unusually, this classically-themed fantasy work was followed by a science fiction sequel, The Ordinary. His most recent novel, The Last Green Tree (2006), is a sequel to The Ordinary.

Four of Grimsley's plays are collected in Mr. Universe and Other Plays.

[edit] Bibliography

Grimsley, Jim, Out of Silence, Brightleaf: A Southern Review of Books, 3, March/April 1998 http://www.brightleaf-review.com/Mar98/grimsley.html.

Grimsley, Jim, Who We Are, Publishers Weekly, September 30, 1996, pp 46-47

Howorth, Lisa. Jim Grimsley: Tales of Southern Courage, Publishers Weekly, November 5, 1999, pp 39-40

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ "Out of Silence," 1998

[edit] External Links

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