A Publication of Humanities Tennessee

Let Us Now Consider Troubling Books

November 28, 2011 From the beginning, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men–the masterpiece of poetry, photography, and reporting by Knoxville-born writer James Agee and photographer Walker Evans–was controversial. During the summer of 1936, the two men book spent four weeks with three families of tenant farmers in Hale County, Alabama, researching and photographing their subsistence-level scramble to survive the Great Depression.

Kevin, Meet Nicole

November 11, 2011 The news that Nicole Kidman, Nashville’s resident movie star, had acquired the rights to The Family Fang, the debut novel by Sewanee’s resident bestselling fiction writer, comes as a surprise to no one who’s read this very cinematic novel about the troubled adult children of two passionate performance artists. (Kidman plans to play the role of Annie Fang.) It comes as news to no one except, perhaps, the book’s author, Kevin Wilson. Chapter 16 caught up with Wilson at the Meacham Writers’ Workshop in Chattanooga and asked him about the movie news:

Another Star for Michael Sims

November 7, 2011 Michael Sims must be getting used to rave reviews. Following a summer of praise for The Story of Charlotte’s Web: E.B. White’s Eccentric Life in Nature and the Birth of an American Classic, now in its third printing, Sims is already earning accolades for his next book.

Writers of the Year

November 2, 2011 At Chapter 16 we extend our heartiest congratulations to Will Campbell, who has been named the Tennessee Writers Alliance 2011 Literary Legend, and to Bill Brown, the 2011 Writer of the Year. According to the TWA’s website,

Since 2006, the Tennessee Writers Alliance has been recognizing writers through two awards, the Tennessee Writer of the Year Award and the Tennessee Literary Legend Award. The purpose of these awards, each given annually, is to recognize writers who have contributed to the literary heritage of the state.

Considering the "Faulkner of Tennessee"

November 1, 2011 An aspiring novelist in need of cheering up has two options for inspiration, and which one works best depends on the struggling scribe’s age. Young writers take heart from the stories of novelists whose first books were rejected by literary agents an outrageous number of times before finally being published and shooting instantly to the top of the bestseller lists (c.f. The Help by Kathryn Stockett, rejected sixty times). Writers well past the first bloom of youth, however, tend to have retired any crazy dreams of riding to wealth and fame on the back of a bestseller. If you’ve been writing in lonely obscurity for decades, the inspirational tales you collect tend to feature noble geniuses who never, ever give up, who slog on despite the the derision of family members and the indifference of agents, and who are eventually discovered by a visionary editor, finally seeing print sometime in middle age or later—older than you, at least.

"After 42 Years"

October 26, 2011 When Muammar Gaddafi’s forces took over Libya, Khaled Mattawa was thirteen. Now the acclaimed poet and translator (and a graduate of the University of Tennessee in Chattanooga) considers the death of the dictator:

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