New Stories From the South
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New Stories From the South is an annual compilation of short stories published by Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill and billed as the year's best stories written by southern writers or about the Southern United States. The stories are collected from more than 100 literary magazines, including The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Magazine, The New Yorker, The Oxford American, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and The Southern Review. Shannon Ravenel, then the editor of the annual Best American Short Stories anthology, launched the New Stories From the South series in 1986 and compiled and edited every volume until 2006. To mark the third decade of the series, Algonquin invited author and John Simon Guggenheim Fellow Allan Gurganus to be guest editor.[1]
New Stories From the South has collected the work of many prominent modern American writers, including Steve Almond, Russell Banks, John Barth, Madison Smartt Bell, Wendell Berry, Roy Blount Jr., Larry Brown, James Lee Burke, Robert Olen Butler, Andre Dubus, William Faulkner (a newly discovered story), Barry Hannah, Nanci Kincaid, Barbara Kingsolver, Bobbie Ann Mason, Reynolds Price, John Sayles, Lee Smith, and Peter Taylor. Today, New Stories From the South ranks among the leading annual fiction anthologies in the United States, along with Best American Short Stories, The Pushcart Prize—Best of the Small Presses, and The O. Henry Prize Stories.
[edit] Resource
Shannon Ravenel (editor), New Stories From the South, 2005, (Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2005).