MURFREESBORO — Playwright
and novelist Kia Corthron, whose debut novel “The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter” earned praise in a recent
New York Times Sunday Book Review, will read from her works in a free public
event set Wednesday, Feb. 17, at MTSU.
Corthron, whose work focuses on sociopolitical issues such as
homelessness, race and violence, will visit MTSU’s Tom Jackson Building at 4:15
p.m. Feb. 17. A special reception and book signing will follow her readings,
and books will be available for purchase on-site.
A searchable, printable campus parking map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap.
The author first drew national attention in the early 1990s with her
play “Come Down Burning” and
continued portraying characters who live in extreme poverty or crisis in works
that include “Breath, Boom,” “The Venus de Milo is Armed,” “Tap the Leopard”
and “A Cool Dip in the Barren Saharan Crick.”
Corthron, who was the 2014 recipient of Yale University's
Windham-Campbell Literature Prize for Drama and the United States Artists
Fellow in Theater prize, also has written episodes for the acclaimed television
series “The Wire” and “The Jury.” Her season four “Wire” episode, “Know Your
Place,” earned her both a Writers Guild Award and an Edgar Award.
She is a native of Maryland who now lives in New York City.
The New York Times Sunday Book Review of “The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter,” published Jan. 29 and
written by Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and 2012 MTSU guest lecturer
Leonard Pitts Jr., said Corthron’s novel “succeeds admirably in a novel’s first
and most difficult task: It makes you give a damn.” You can read the review at http://ow.ly/YlUpp.
The MTSU Virginia Peck Trust Fund and the College of Liberal Arts are
making Corthron’s visit possible. For more information, email claudia.barnett@mtsu.edu or visit http://mtsu.edu/liberalarts/calendar.php.
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