Touring Literary Mississippi
270 pages, 6 1/2 x 9 4/25
Paperback
Release Date:27 Sep 2002
ISBN:9781578063680
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Touring Literary Mississippi

University Press of Mississippi

By taking the literary traveler on seven preplanned tours—through the Delta, along Highway 61, to the heart of Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha country, to sites near Interstate 55 and the Natchez Trace, to the piney woods of East and South Mississippi, and along the sun-struck Gulf Coast—this book captures the phenomenal abundance and diversity of Mississippi literature.

More than a guidebook, this book includes capsule biographies and well over a hundred photographs of writers, their residences, and their literary environments. It also provides maps and gives explicit directions to writers’ homes and other literary sites.

The sheer number of writers discovered, recovered, and claimed by Mississippi will astonish travelers both from within and from without the state. Included are not only such major figures in the pantheon of American literature as William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, Tennessee Williams, and Richard Wright but also the less well-known.

Every nook and cranny of the state claims a piece of Mississippi’s literary heritage. Literature pervades Yazoo City, Jackson, Greenville, Oxford, Natchez, the Gulf Coast, and the Delta Blues country. Willie Morris, Richard Ford, and Beverly Lowry have declared that a famous writer’s presence in their hometowns convinced them that they too could be writers.

As the locations bring to life the connection of ordinary rituals with the stuff of fiction, poetry, and memoir, these hands-on tours make evident the special cross-pollination of writer and community in Mississippi.

Patti Carr Black, former director of the Old Capitol Museum of Mississippi History, is an art historian based in Jackson, Mississippi. She is editor of Eudora Welty’s Early Escapades and author of Art in Mississippi, 1720-1980 and The Southern Writers Quiz Book, among other works. Marion Barnwell is professor emerita of English at Delta State University. She is editor of A Place Called Mississippi: Collected Narratives and coeditor of Fannye Cook: Mississippi’s Pioneering Conservationist, both published by University Press of Mississippi. Her fiction has been published in the edited collections Mad Dogs and Moonshine; Christmas Stories from Mississippi; and On the Way Home; and her essays have appeared in magazines such as Delta Magazine and Portico. She is a board member and past president of Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters and Jackson Friends of the Library.

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