MURFREESBORO
— A pair of authors in town for the annual Southern Festival of Books will
visit MTSU Monday, Oct. 17, for special campus discussions arranged in part by
the university’s Virginia Peck Foundation Trust Fund.
Marjory Wentworth, poet laureate of South Carolina,
and Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize fiction winner, will speak at 1 p.m. and
3 p.m., respectively, in the second-floor Parliamentary Room of MTSU’s Student
Union, located at 1768 MTSU Blvd.
A searchable, printable campus parking map is
available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap.
Off-campus visitors attending the events should obtain a special one-day permit
from MTSU’s Office of Parking and Transportation at http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.
Wentworth is a five-time Pushcart Prize nominee for
her poetry, which has been published in collections that include “Noticing
Eden,” “Despite Gravity” and “The Endless Repetition of an Ordinary Miracle.”
She also is the co-writer of “Taking a Stand: The Evolution of Human Rights” and
author of the prizewinning children’s story “Shackles” and is on the faculty at
The Art Institute of Charleston.
Her 1 p.m. Oct. 17 reading and discussion,
co-presented by the Tom T. Hall Writers Series in MTSU’s College of Media and
Entertainment, will feature her newest work, “We Are Charleston: Tragedy and
Triumph at Mother Emanuel,” with Herb Frazier and Dr. Bernard Powers.
“We Are Charleston,” which focuses on the history
of Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church and the aftermath of the
June 2015 massacre of nine of its members, will be for sale following the
discussion. Wentworth will be on hand to sign copies.
Butler has published 16 novels, including “The
Alleys of Eden,” “Sun Dogs,” “Countrymen of Bones” and his newest, “Perfume
River,” as well as six volumes of short fiction. He is the 2013 recipient of
the F. Scott Fitzgerald Award for Outstanding Achievement in American
Literature, winner of two Pushcart Prizes and has also received both a
Guggenheim Fellowship in fiction and a National Endowment for the Arts grant.
In addition to a stint writing screenplays for
Hollywood, Butler is a Francis Eppes Distinguished Professor in the Michael
Shaara Chair in Creative Writing at Florida State University.
His 3 p.m. Oct. 17 visit, which is co-presented by
MTSU’s English Department, will feature a reading from his short-story collection
“A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain,” which received the 1993 Pulitzer Prize
for fiction. Butler also will be available after the discussion to sign copies
of the book, which will be available for purchase.
The Tom T. Hall Writers Series in the College of Media
and Entertainment at MTSU celebrates songwriters, authors, poets and
screenwriters and offers students, faculty, staff and the public a chance to
learn more about the creative process as well as the business end of success.
Previous Hall Writers Series guests have included
country superstar Vince Gill, acclaimed songwriter John Hiatt, bluegrass
impresario Ricky Skaggs, renowned folk music scholar Stephen Wade and famed
"Ya-Ya Sisterhood" trilogy author Rebecca Wells.
You can
learn more about Wentworth at her website, http://www.marjorywentworth.net.
Butler’s website is http://www.robertolenbutler.com.
The 28th
annual Southern Festival of Books: A Celebration of the Written Word is
scheduled this weekend, Oct. 14-16, at Nashville’s War Memorial Plaza. More
information is available at http://ow.ly/241N3057s7h.
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