AL Author Collection (152 total)

Name/Lifespan Biography Subject Publications
AtkinsAce_thumbnail.png Ace Atkins Atkins, Ace
1970-present

Ace Atkins was born in Troy, Alabama. He was raised in Auburn, Alabama, and graduated from Auburn University in 1994. After graduation, Atkins relocated to Florida, where he worked in a bookstore and served as a correspondent for the St. Petersburg Times before transitioning to crime reporting at the Tampa Tribune. While at the Tampa Tribune, he earned a Pulitzer Prize nomination for his investigative feature series on a forgotten murder of the 1950s. His career as a novelist began with the publication of his first "Nick Travers" mystery novel, Crossroad Blues, in 1998. In 2001, Atkins became a full-time novelist and moved with his family to Oxford, Mississippi.

Ace Atkins writes mystery and crime novels. His works are often set in places he has lived, and many of his novels are based on real-life crimes. Crossroad Blues. New York; St. Martin's Press, 1998.

Leavin' Trunk Blues. New York; St. Martin's, 2001.

Dark End of the Street. New York; William Morrow, 2002.

Dirty South. New York; William Morrow, 2004.

White Shadow. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2006.

Wicked City. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2008.

Devil's Garden. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2009.

Infamous. New York; Berkley, 2010.

The Ranger. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2011.

Robert B. Parker's Lullaby. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2012.

The Lost Ones. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2012.

Robert B. Parker's Wonderland. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2013.

The Broken Places. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2013.

Robert B. Parker's Cheap Shot. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2014.

The Forsaken. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2014.

Robert B. Parker's Kickback. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2015.

The Redeemers. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2015.

Robert B. Parker's Slow Burn. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2016.

The Innocents. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2016.

Robert B. Parker's Little White Lies. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2017.

The Fallen. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2017.

Robert B. Parker's Old Black Magic. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2018.

The Sinners. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2018.

Robert B. Parker's Angel Eyes. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2019.

The Shameless. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2019.

Robert B. Parker’s Someone To Watch Over Me. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2020.

The Revelators. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2020.

The Heathens. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2021.

Robert B. Parker's Bye Bye Baby. New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2022.

Don’t Let the Devil Ride. New York; William Morrow, 2024.

Knight, Michael (Thumbnail).jpg Michael Knight Knight, Michael
1969-present

Michael Knight is originally from Mobile, Alabama. He developed a passion for storytelling from an early age and honed his craft throughout his education. After earning his bachelor’s degree from Hampden-Sydney College, he pursued further studies in creative writing at the University of Southern Mississippi and the University of Virginia, earning his MA and MFA, respectively. In 1995, Knight began publishing his short stories in literary journals, and in 1998, he published his first novel. With a diverse collection of published novels and short stories, Knight currently works as a professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Michael Knight writes short stories and novels, many of which are set in Alabama. A major theme in his works is contemporary relationships. Dogfight, and Other Stories. New York; Plume, 1998.

Divining Rod. New York; Dutton, 1998.

Goodnight, Nobody. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 2003.

The Holiday Season. New York; Grove Press, 2007.

The Typist. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 2010.

Eveningland. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 2017.

At Briarwood School for Girls. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 2019.
Gilman, Rebecca (Thumbnail).jpg Rebecca Gilman Gilman, Rebecca
1964-present

Rebecca Gilman is a native of Trussville, Alabama, who developed a passion for dramatic literature at an early age, finding inspiration in George Bernard Shaw's plays. Gilman pursued higher education, earning a bachelor’s degree from Birmingham-Southern College, a master’s degree from the University of Virginia, and an MFA from the University of Iowa. Gilman began writing plays while still in college and moved to Chicago to live and write after graduating from UI. Her breakthrough came with the production of The Glory of Living in 1997, which garnered critical acclaim and led to further successes such as Spinning Into Butter. Recognized with prestigious awards and fellowships, Gilman continues to make significant contributions to the theater scene, with her most recent work, Luna Gale, being performed at the Goodman Theatre in 2014.

Rebecca Gilman writes award-winning plays that are often set in the South. Themes in her work include racism, sexual harassment and stalking, crime, and everyday dilemmas. My Sin and Nothing More. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 1997.

The Land of Little Horses. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 1997.

Boy Gets Girl: A Play. New York; Faber and Faber, 2000.

Spinning Into Butter: A Play. New York; Faber and Faber, 2000.

Blue Surge: A Play. New York; Faber and Faber, 2001.

The Glory of Living: A Play. New York; Faber and Faber, 2001.

The Sweetest Swing in Baseball. London; Faber and Faber, 2004.

The Crowd You're In With: A Play. Evanston, Ill.; Northwestern University Press, 2009.

Luna Gale. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2014.

Twilight Bowl. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2019.

Swing State. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2022.
Franklin, Tom (Thumbnail).jpg Tom Franklin Franklin, Tom
1963-present

Tom Franklin is a native of Dickinson, Alabama, who demonstrated his early passion for writing through the creation of self-made comic books and short stories inspired by Conan the Barbarian and Tarzan. Franklin completed his bachelor’s degree in English at the University of South Alabama in 1990, and he further honed his writing skills through the completion of an MFA at the University of Arkansas in 1998. His first collection of short stories, Poachers, was published in 1999, and his first novel, Hell at the Breech, was published in 2003. Throughout his writing career, Franklin has held notable residencies and fellowships, such as the Philip Roth Residency in Creative Writing at Bucknell University and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Franklin is currently an associate professor of fiction writing at the University of Mississippi.

Tom Franklin writes short stories and novels set in the rural South. He draws inspiration from his personal experience growing up in Alabama. His works are often violent and discuss themes such as poverty and race. Poachers. New York; Morrow, 1999.

Hell at the Breech. New York; HarperCollins, 2003.

Smonk. New York; HarperCollins, 2006.

Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter. New York; HarperCollins, 2010.

Joint Publication:

The Tilted World. New York; HarperCollins, 2013.
Dewberry, Elizabeth (Thumbnail).jpg Elizabeth Dewberry Dewberry, Elizabeth
1962-present

Elizabeth Dewberry was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama. After completing her undergraduate studies at Vanderbilt University, she pursued graduate studies at the University of Alabama before transferring to Emory University, where she obtained her PhD in American literature in 1989. Dewberry’s debut novel, Many Things Have Happened Since He Died, was published in 1990. Dewberry went on to hold teaching positions at Samford University and Ohio State University while continuing to write novels. In the mid-1990s, Dewberry began writing plays, and she was playwright-in-residence at Florida State University in the early 2000s. Today, Dewberry is settled in Florida and continues to write novels and plays.

Elizabeth Dewberry writes novels and plays often set in the South. Her works include strong female characters and involve themes like identity and danger. Many Things Have Happened Since He Died: And Here Are the Highlights. New York; Doubleday, 1990.

Break the Heart of Me. New York; N.A. Talese, 1994.

Flesh and Blood. Woodstock Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 1997.

Sacrament of Lies. New York; Berkley, 2002.

His Lovely Wife. Boston; Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2006.
Johnson, Angela (Thumbnail).jpg Angela Johnson Johnson, Angela
1961-present

Angela Johnson is originally from Tuskegee, Alabama, but relocated to Ohio during her childhood. She briefly attended Kent State University, deciding to leave because of writer’s block. She worked as a child development worker for Volunteers in Service to America before pursuing writing full-time. Johnson's literary achievements span picture books, young adult novels, poetry, and short story collections. She is a three-time recipient of the Coretta Scott King award for her young adult novels and has been honored with the Alabama Author award twice. She earned her most prestigious accolade, the five-year MacArthur Foundation Fellowship, in 2003. She continues to write and was inducted into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2023.

Angela Johnson writes short stories, poetry, children's books, and young adult novels marked by their vivid imagery and memorable characters. Her works are about the lives and struggles of African Americans and are often set in Alabama. Major themes in her works include coming of age, family, and belonging. Tell Me a Story, Mama. New York; Orchard Books, 1989.

When I Am Old with You. New York; Orchard Books, 1990.

Do Like Kyla. New York; Orchard Books, 1990.

One of Three. New York; Orchard Books, 1991.

The Leaving Morning. New York; Orchard Books, 1992.

Julius. New York; Orchard Books, 1993.

The Girl Who Wore Snakes. New York; Orchard Books, 1993.

Toning the Sweep. New York; Scholastic, 1993.

Joshua by the Sea. New York; Orchard Books, 1994.

Mama Bird, Baby Birds. New York; Orchard Books, 1994.

Rain Feet. New York; Orchard Books, 1994.

Joshua's Night Whispers. New York; Orchard Books, 1994.

Humming Whispers. New York; Orchard Books, 1995.

Shoes Like Miss Alice's. New York; Orchard Books, 1995.

The Aunt in Our House. New York; Orchard Books, 1996.

Daddy Calls Me Man. New York; Orchard Books, 1997.

The Rolling Store. New York; Orchard Books, 1997.

Gone From Home: Short Takes. London; Doring Kindersley Publishing, 1998.

Heaven. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1998.

Songs of Faith. New York; Orchard Books, 1998.

The Other Side: Shorter Poems. New York; Orchard Books, 1998.

Maniac Monkeys on Magnolia Street. New York; Random House, 1999.

The Wedding. New York; Orchard Books, 1999.

Those Building Men. New York; Scholastic, 1999.

When Mules Flew on Magnolia Street. New York; Random House, 1999.

Down the Winding Road. London; Doring Kindersley Publishing, 2000.

Looking for Red. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2002.

A Cool Moonlight. New York; Puffin Books, 2003.

I Dream of Trains. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2003.

Running Back to Ludie. New York; Scholastic, 2003.

The First Part Last. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2003.

Violet's Music. New York; Random House, 2004.

Bird. New York; Puffin Books, 2004.

A Sweet Smell of Roses. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2005.

Just Like Josh Gibson. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2007.

Lily Brown's Paintings. New York; Orchard Books, 2007.

Wind Flyers. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2007.

Sweet, Hereafter. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2009.

The Day Ray Got Away. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2010.

Lottie Paris Lives Here. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2011.

A Certain October. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2012.

Lottie Paris and the Best Place. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2013.

A Girl Like Me. Minneapolis, Minn.; Millbrook Press, 2020.
Dorsey, Tim (Thumbnail).jpg Tim Dorsey Dorsey, Tim
1961-2023

Tim Dorsey was born in Indiana but raised in Riviera Beach, Florida. He became interested in writing while attending Bishop Guertin High School, a Catholic boarding school in New Hampshire. After earning a bachelor’s degree in transportation from Auburn University in 1983, Dorsey began his career as a police and courts reporter at The Alabama Journal. In 1987, Dorsey moved to Tampa, Florida, to work at The Tampa Tribune, and he also began writing a novel during this time. His debut novel Florida Roadkill was published in 1999 as the first installment of the “Serge A. Storms” mystery series. After his first publication, Dorsey began writing full-time and published a new novel in his “Serge A. Storms” mystery series each year until his death in 2023.

Tim Dorsey was a journalist and writer of humorous crime novels. His novels are known for their portrayal of odd Floridians. Florida Roadkill. New York; Morrow, 1999.

Hammerhead Ranch Motel. New York; Morrow, 2000.

Orange Crush. New York; Morrow, 2001.

Triggerfish Twist. New York; Morrow, 2002.

The Stingray Shuffle. New York; Morrow, 2003.

Cadillac Beach. New York; Morrow, 2004.

Torpedo Juice. New York; Morrow, 2005.

The Big Bamboo. New York; Morrow, 2006.

Hurricane Punch. New York; Morrow, 2007.

Atomic Lobster. New York; Morrow, 2008.

Nuclear Jellyfish. New York; Morrow, 2009.

Gator A-Go-Go. New York; Morrow, 2010.

Electric Barracuda. New York; Morrow, 2011.

When Elves Attack. New York; Morrow, 2011.

Pineapple Grenade. New York; Morrow, 2012.

The Rip Tide Ultra-Glide. New York; Morrow, 2013.

Tiger Shrimp Tango. New York; Morrow, 2014.

Shark Skin Suite. New York; Morrow, 2015.

Coconut Cowboy. New York; Morrow, 2016.

Clownfish Blues. New York; Morrow, 2017.

The Pope of Palm Beach. New York; Morrow, 2018.

No Sunscreen for the Dead. New York; Morrow, 2019.

Naked Came the Florida Man. New York; Morrow, 2020.

Tropic of Stupid. New York; Morrow, 2021.

Mermaid Confidential: A Novel. New York; Morrow, 2022.

The Maltese Iguana: A Novel. New York; Morrow, 2023.
Wallace, Daniel (Thumbnail).jpg Daniel Wallace Wallace, Daniel
1959-present

Daniel Wallace is a native of Mountain View, Alabama, near Birmingham. Wallace initially pursued higher education at Emory University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but he left before graduating in order to live and work in Japan for two years. He then returned to Chapel Hill, took a job in a bookstore, and began writing in his free time. It took nearly fourteen years, a dozen published short stories, and five unpublished novels for Wallace to sell Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions to Algonquin Books for publishing. The novel was adapted for film in 2003, and Wallace himself makes an appearance in the film as a professor at Auburn University. He went on to write additional novels and also branched out to write children’s books. In 2008, he obtained a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and he now teaches creative writing as the J. Ross MacDonald Distinguished Professor of English at Chapel Hill. He won a Harper Lee Award in 2019 and was inducted into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2023, the same year he published his memoir, This Isn't Going to End Well: The True Story of a Man I Thought I Knew.

Daniel Wallace writes episodic novels set in the South that explore themes like magical realism, parent-son relationships, and mythology. He has also written short stories, children's books, and screenplays. Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions. North Carolina; Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 1998; reprinted, 2013.

Ray in Reverse. New York; Penguin Books, 2001.

The Watermelon King. Boston; Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2003.

Mr. Sebastian and the Negro Magician. New York; Doubleday, 2007.

The Cat’s Pajamas. Oakland, California; Inkshares, 2014.

The Kings and Queens of Roam. New York; Gallery Books, 2014.

Extraordinary Adventures. New York; St. Martin’s Press, 2017.

This Isn't Going to End Well: The True Story of a Man I Thought I Knew. Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Algonquin Books, 2023.

Joint Publications:

The Largely Literary Legacy of the Late Leon Tolbert. New York; Crown, 1995.
Miller,William .jpg William Miller Miller, William
1959-present

William Miller is a native of Anniston, Alabama. He studied under poet Charles Ghigna at the Alabama School of Fine Arts before obtaining a bachelor’s degree from Eckard College in 1982. He went on to earn a master’s degree from Hollins College and then taught for several years at Jacksonville State University. Miller completed a PhD in English and American literature at State University of New York at Binghamton in 1988 and began teaching at York College shortly after. His writing career took off in the early 1990s with the publication of his first two poetry collections. With the encouragement of his mentor Ghigna, Miller also branched out and began writing children’s books, including the acclaimed work Zora Hurston and the Chinaberry Tree, which was featured on the PBS series Reading Rainbow.

William Miller writes poetry and children's books about Black Americans. He draws inspiration from true stories when writing some of his children's books. The Trees Are Mended. Thomston, Maine; Northwoods Press, 1987.

Old Faith. Lewiston, N.Y.; Mellen Poetry Press, 1991.

Breathed on Glass. Alabama; Druid Press, 1992.

Zora Hurston and the Chinaberry Tree. New York; Lee & Low Books, 1994.

Frederick Douglass and the Last Day of Slavery. New York; Lee & Low Books, 1995.

The Knee-High Man. Layton, Utah; Gibbs Smith, 1995.

The Conjure Woman. New York; Atheneum, 1996.

The Bus Ride. New York; Lee & Low Books, 1997.

A House by the River. New York; Lee & Low Books, 1997.

Richard Wright and the Library Card. New York; Lee & Low Books, 1997.

Night Golf. New York; Lee & Low Books, 1999.

The Piano. New York; Lee & Low Books, 2000.

Tituba. San Diego, Calif.; Gulliver Books, 2000.

Skywalkers: Poems. Lewiston, N.Y.; Mellon Poetry Press, 2001.

Joe Louis, My Champion. New York; Lee & Low Books, 2004.
BraggRick_thumbnail.jpg Rick Bragg Bragg, Rick
1959-present

Rick Bragg is a native of Piedmont, Alabama. He contributed to his high school and college newspapers before beginning his career as a sports writer for The Jacksonville News. Bragg left The Jacksonville News to work for The Anniston Star and The Birmingham News. Then, he began covering stories of national interest at St. Petersburg [Fla.] Times. Bragg took a year to study journalism at Harvard University after being awarded a Neiman Fellowship in 1992. In 1994, he began working for the New York Times, and he earned a Pulitzer Prize in 1996 for his human interest stories. His first book, an autobiographical account of his difficult childhood, was published in 1997. In 2003, Bragg resigned from The New York Times to work exclusively on his own books. He is currently a journalism professor at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.

Rick Bragg is a journalist, professor, and nonfiction writer. His nonfiction is deeply personal and explores his life and family. All Over but the Shoutin'. New York: Pantheon, 1997.

Redbirds: Memories from the South. London: Harville Press, 1998.

Somebody Told Me: The Newspaper Stories of Rick Bragg. New York; Vintage Books, 2001.

Ava's Man. New York; Vintage Books, 2002.

I Am a Soldier, Too: The Jessica Lynch Story. New York; Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.

The Prince of Frogtown. New York; Random House, 2008.

The Most They Ever Had. San Francisco, Calif.; MacAdam/Cage, 2009.

Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story. New York; HarperCollins, 2014.

My Southern Journey: True Stories from the Heart of the South. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 2015.

The Best Cook in the World: Tales From My Momma's Table. New York; Alfred A. Knopf, 2018.

Where I Come from: Stories from the Deep South. New York; Alfred A. Knopf, 2020.

The Speckled Beauty: A Dog and His People, Lost and Found. New York; Alfred A. Knopf, 2021.

Joint Publications:

Wooden Churches. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Press, 1999.
Childress, Mark (Thumbnail).jpg Mark Childress Childress, Mark
1957-present

Mark Childress hails from Monroeville, Alabama. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English and journalism from the University of Alabama before beginning his journalism career. During this career, he contributed to publications such as The Birmingham News and Southern Living. Childress published his first novel, A World Made of Fire, in 1984 and soon retired from journalism to pursue his career as an author. His acclaimed novel Crazy in Alabama was adapted into a film in 1999. Childress has also delved into children's literature and has received prestigious accolades for his literary accomplishments. He currently resides in New York.

Mark Childress writes novels, screenplays, and children's books. His works feature southern culture and experiences. Themes in his novels include coming of age, war, adventure, and ambition. A World Made of Fire. New York; Knopf, 1984.

V For Victor. New York; Knopf, 1988.

Tender. New York; Harmony Books, 1989.

Joshua and Bigtooth. Boston; Little, Brown, 1992.

Crazy in Alabama. New York; Ballantine Books, 1993.

Joshua and the Big Bad Blue Crabs. Boston; Little, Brown, 1996.

Henry Bobbity Is Missing And It Is All Billy Bobbity's Fault. Birmingham; Crane Hill Publishers, 1996.

Gone for Good. New York; Knopf, 1998.

One Mississippi. New York; Back Bay Books, 2006.

Georgia Bottoms. Boston; Little, Brown, 2011.

Looking for Harper Lee: Two Essays. Overture Books, 2012.

What It Means to Miss New Orleans. Overture Books, 2013.

The Book of Orange: A Journal of the Trump Years By a Crazed Snowflake Employing Rhyming Insults, Limericks, Loathing, Hyperbole, Secret Transcripts, Show Tunes, Mockery, Rants, Jokes, and Rude Memes. Mark Childress, 2020.
Wheeler, Cindy (Thumbnail).jpg Cindy Wheeler Wheeler, Cindy
1955-present

Cindy Wheeler was born in Montgomery, Alabama, but was raised in the Appalachian mountains of Virginia and North Carolina. Wheeler obtained a bachelor’s degree from Auburn University and later became a freelance children’s book author and illustrator. Her achievements include the publication of A Good Day, A Good Night, which earned her the Alabama Library Association Award for Best Children's Book in 1985.

Cindy Wheeler is a writer and illustrator of children's books, many of which include characters inspired by her cats. She also paints landscapes. A Good Day, A Good Night. New York; Lippincott, 1980.

Marmalade's Snowy Day. New York; Knopf, 1982.

Marmalade's Yellow Leaf. New York; Knopf, 1982.

The Scaredy Cats and the Haunted House. New York; Random House, 1982.

Marmalade's Nap. New York; Knopf, 1983.

Marmalade's Picnic. New York; Knopf, 1983.

Marmalade's Christmas Present. New York; Knopf, 1984.

Rose. New York; Knopf, 1985.

Merry Christmas, Little Mouse. New York; Happy House, 1986.

A New House for Little Mouse. New York; Random House, 1987.

A Day on the Farm. New York; Happy House, 1987.

Sally Wants to Help. New York; Random House, 1988.

Spring Is Here! New York; Happy House, 1989.

Bookstore Cat. New York; Random House, 1994.

Simple Signs. New York; Viking, 1995.

The Emperor's Birthday Suit. New York; Random House, 1996.

Early Easter Morning. New York; Scholastic, 1997.

What's In Your Basket? New York; Scholastic, 1997.

More Simple Signs. New York; Viking, 1998.

The Fuzzy Duckling. Racine, Wis.; Golden Books, 1998.

Ralph's Hospital Adventures. Herndon, Va.; Mascot Books, 2018.
Rheta_Grimsley_Johnson.jpg Rheta Grimsley Johnson Johnson, Rheta Grimsley
1953-present

Rheta Grimsley Johnson is originally from Colquitt, Georgia, but was raised in Montgomery, Alabama. She discovered her passion for journalism early on and actively pursued it. After graduating with a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Auburn University, she gained experience at various newspapers and press agencies, eventually becoming a reporter and columnist for The Memphis Commercial Appeal. Her columns gained national recognition through distribution by the Scripps-Howard News Service, and she has published collections of her columns such as America's Faces. Today, Johnson writes columns for King Features Syndicate and has also written memoirs and a biography.

Rheta Grimsley Johnson is a journalist, columnist, and memoirist who has also written a biography of cartoonist Charles M. Schultz. She writes mainly about life in the rural South and likes to tell the stories of average southern people. Good Grief: The Story of Charles Schulz. New York; Pharos Books, 1989.

Poor Man's Provence: Finding Myself in Cajun Louisiana. Montgomery, Ala.; NewSouth Books, 2008.

Enchanted Evening Barbie and the Second Coming: A Memoir. Montgomery, Ala.; NewSouth Books, 2010.

Hank Hung the Moon ... and Warmed Our Cold, Cold Hearts. Montgomery, Ala.; NewSouth Books, 2012.

The Dogs Buried Over The Bridge: A Memoir in Dog Years. Winston-Salem, N.C.; John F. Blair, 2016.

Joint Publications:

They Didn't Put That on the Huntley-Brinkley! A Vagabond Reporter Encounters the New South. Athens; University of Georgia Press, 1993.
Haines, Carolyn (Thumbnail).jpeg Carolyn Haines Haines, Carolyn
1953-present

Carolyn Haines was born and raised in Mississippi. With a journalistic background inherited from her parents, Haines completed her bachelor’s degree in journalism at the University of Southern Mississippi in 1974. For the next decade, Haines worked as a photojournalist at various newspapers while writing fiction in her free time. In 1985, she returned to higher education and earned a master's degree in creative writing from the University of South Alabama. Her first novel, A Deadly Breed, was published in 1988. Haines gained recognition for her mystery novels, including her popular "Bones" series featuring detective Sarah Booth Delaney. Alongside her writing pursuits, she dedicates herself to teaching creative writing and actively participates in animal rescue endeavors while residing on a farm in Alabama.

Carolyn Haines is a novelist specializing in the mystery genre. She uses the pseudonyms Caroline Burnes and Lizzie Hart in romantic mysteries and humor, respectively. Many of her mysteries are set in the Mississippi Delta. Phantom Filly. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1989.

Fear Familiar. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1990.

The Jaguar's Eye. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1990.

Fatal Ingredients. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1992.

Hoodwinked. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1993.

Thrice Familiar. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1993.

Too Familiar. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1993.

Cutting Edge. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1994.

Familiar Remedy. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1994.

Shades of Familiar. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1994.

Summer of the Redeemers. New York; Dutton, 1994. Rpt. as Season of Innocents. London; Headline, 1994. Rpt. Montgomery; River City Pub., 2005.

Bewitching Familiar. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1995.

Familiar Tale. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1995.

Touched. New York; Dutton, 1996.

Familiar Heart. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1997.

Familiar Fire. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1998.

Shop Talk. Semmes, Ala.; KaliOka Press, 1998.

Familiar Christmas. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1999.

Familiar Valentine. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 1999.

Them Bones. New York; Bantam Books, 1999.

Buried Bones. New York; Bantam Books, 2000.

Familiar Obsession. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2000.

Moments With Eugene: A Collection of Memories. Semmes, Ala.; KaliOka Press, 2000.

Texas Midnight. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2000.

Familiar Lullaby. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2001.

Midnight Burning. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2001.

Familiar Mirage. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2002.

Familiar Oasis. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2002.

Flesh and Blood. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2002.

Babe in the Woods. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2003.

My Mother's Witness: The Peggy Morgan Story. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Pub., 2003.

Rider in the Mist. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2003.

Splintered Bones. New York; Dell, 2003.

Crossed Bones. New York; Dell, 2004.

Familiar Texas. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2005.

Hallowed Bones. New York; Dell, 2005.

Judas Burning. Montgomery; River City Pub., 2005.

Bones to Pick. New York; Kensington, 2006.

Familiar Escape. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2006.

Penumbra. New York; Minotaur Books, 2006.

Fever Moon. New York; St. Martin's Minotaur, 2007.

Ham Bones. New York; Kensington, 2007.

Revenant. Toronto, Canada; Mira Books, 2007.

Familiar Vows. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2008.

Wishbones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2008.

Familiar Showdown. Winnipeg, Canada; Harlequin, 2009.

Greedy Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2009.

Bone Appétit. New York; Minotaur Books, 2010.

Bones of a Feather. New York; Minotaur Books, 2011.

Skin Dancer. Semmes, Ala.; KaliOka Press, 2011.

Bonefire of the Vanities. New York; Minotaur Books, 2012.

Deception. Madison, Wis.; Tyrus Books, 2012.

Smarty Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2013.

The Darkling. New York; Pegasus, 2013.

Booty Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2014.

The Seeker. New York; Pegasus, 2014.

Bone to Be Wild. New York; Minotaur Books, 2015.

Rock-a-Bye Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2016.

The Book of Beloved. Seattle, Wash.; Thomas & Mercer, 2016.

Sticks and Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2017.

The House of Memory. Seattle, Wash.; Thomas & Mercer, 2017.

The Specter of Seduction. Semmes, Ala.; KaliOka Press, 2017.

Charmed Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2018.

A Gift of Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2018.

A Visitation of Angels. Semmes, Ala.; Good Fortune Farm Refuge, 2019.

Game of Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2019.

The Devil's Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2020.

A Garland of Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2020.

Independent Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2021.

Trouble Restored. Semmes, Ala.; Good Fortune Farm Refuge, 2021.

Bones of Holly. New York; Minotaur Books, 2022.

Lady of Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2022.

Tell-Tale Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2023.

Blue Christmas Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2024.

Lights, Camera, Bones. New York; Minotaur Books, 2024.
McCammon, Robert_R (Thumbnail).jpg Robert R. McCammon McCammon, Robert R.
1952-present

Robert R. McCammon is a native of Birmingham, Alabama. Under the nurturing influence of his grandparents, McCammon's early exposure to storytelling and literature sparked his passion for writing. After completing a journalism degree at the University of Alabama, he briefly worked as a copy editor. He decided to write full-time after his debut novel, Baal, was published in 1978. McCammon helped found the Horror Writers Association and has garnered global recognition for his novels. He continues to live and write in Birmingham.

Robert R. McCammon writes short stories and novels in the genres of horror, speculative fiction, and historical fiction. Many of his works examine the nature of evil. Baal. New York; Avon, 1978.

Diana's Daughters. New York; Avon, 1979.

Bethany's Sin. New York; Avon, 1980.

The Hungry. New York; Avon, 1980.

The Night Boat. New York; Avon Books, 1980.

They Thirst. New York; Avon, 1981.

Mystery Walk. New York; Holt, Rhinehart, & Winston, 1983.

Usher's Passing. New York; Holt, Rhinehart, & Winston, 1984.

Swan Song. New York; Pocket Books, 1987.

Stinger. New York; Pocket Books, 1988.

Blue World, and other Stories. London; Grafton, 1989.

Wolf's Hour. New York; Pocket Books, 1989.

Mine. New York; Pocket Books, 1990.

Boy's Life. New York; Pocket Books, 1991.

Gone South. New York; Pocket Books, 1992.

Speaks the Nightbird Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishing, 2002.

The Queen of Bedlam. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2007.

Mister Slaughter. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2010.

The Five. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2011.

The Hunter from the Woods. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2011.

The Providence Rider. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2012.

I Travel by Night. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2013.

The River of Souls. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2014.

The Border. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2015.

Freedom of the Mask. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2016.

I Travel by Night 2: Last Train from Perdition. Burton, Mich.; Subterranean Press, 2016.

The Listener. Forest Hill, Md.; Cemetery Dance, 2018.

Cardinal Black. Forest Hill, Md.; Cemetery Dance, 2019.

A Little Amber Book of Wicked Shots. Benson, Md.; Borderlands Press, 2020.

The King of Shadows. Mechanicsburg, Penn.; Lividian Publications, 2022.

Seven Shades of Evil. Mechanicsburg, Penn.; Lividian Publications, 2023.
Covington, Vicki (Thumbnail).jpg Vicki Covington Covington, Vicki
1952-present

Vicki Covington is a native of Birmingham, Alabama. She demonstrated a strong inclination for writing from a young age, chronicling her experiences in personal journals. While attending the University of Alabama from 1971-1976, Covington earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology and a master’s degree in social work. Covington's literary endeavors gained traction in the 1980s when her short stories were published in several literary magazines, including The New Yorker. Over the years, she has authored several novels and also co-wrote a memoir with her husband, Dennis Covington.

Vicki Covington writes novels, short stories, and essays. Her fiction is often set in the South and involves themes of family and community. Her nonfiction uses an honest tone to discuss deeply personal topics. Gathering Home. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1988.

Bird of Paradise. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1990.

Night Ride Home. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1992.

The Last Hotel for Women: A Novel. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1996.

Women in a Man’s World, Crying: Essays. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 2002.

Once in a Blue Moon. Durham, N.C.; Blair, 2017.

Joint Publication:

Cleaving: The Story of a Marriage. New York; North Point Press, 1999.
Hudgins, Andrew (Thumbnail).jpg Andrew Hudgins Hudgins, Andrew
1951-present

Andrew Hudgins was born into a military family and moved from base to base before settling in Montgomery, Alabama. He earned his bachelor’s degree in English and history from Huntingdon College in 1974 before teaching for one year in Montgomery. Returning to higher education, Hudgins obtained a master's degree in English from the University of Alabama and later completed studies at Syracuse University and the University of Iowa Writer's Workshop program. He embarked on a successful poetry career, publishing his Pulitzer-Prize-finalist debut collection, Saints and Strangers, in 1985. Hudgins has been recognized with numerous fellowships over the years, including ones from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. He was inducted into the Fellowship of Southern Writers in 2007 and currently serves as a faculty member in the English department at Ohio State University.

Andrew Hudgins is primarily a poet but writes essays as well. His work includes southern imagery and dives into themes of politics, injustice, religion, and even humor. Saints and Strangers. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1985.

After the Lost War: A Narrative. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1988.

The Never-Ending: New Poems. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1991.

The Glass Hammer: A Southern Childhood. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1994.

The Glass Anvil. Ann Arbor; University of Michigan Press, 1997.

Babylon in a Jar: New Poems. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1998.

Ecstatic in the Poison: New Poems. Woodstock, N.Y.; Overlook Press, 2003.

Shut Up, You're Fine: Poems for Very, Very Bad Children. New York; Abrams, 2009.

American Rendering: New and Selected Poems. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 2010.

Diary of a Poem. Ann Arbor, Mich.; University of Michigan Press, 2011.

A Clown at Midnight. New York; Ecco, 2013.

The Joker: A Memoir. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2013.
Peter_Huggins.jpg Peter Huggins Huggins, Peter
1951-2022

Peter Huggins was born in Oxford, Mississippi, but his family moved frequently when he was growing up. He pursued higher education at the University of the South, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in history in 1973. Although he obtained a JD from Samford University in 1978 and was admitted to the bar in Louisiana, Huggins never practiced law. Instead, Huggins shifted his focus to writing and garnered national recognition for his poetry. He furthered his academic pursuits by earning an MFA from the University of Alabama and subsequently became an English instructor at Auburn University, where he remained for the next thirty years. Huggins published primarily poetry but also branched out to children's books and young adult novels. He continued to live and write in Auburn, Alabama, until his passing in 2022.

Peter Huggins wrote poetry, children's books, and young adult novels. His works were inspired by his southern background and reflect his subtle wit. Hard Facts. Livingston, Ala.; Livingston Press and University of West Alabama, 1998.

Blue Angels: Poems. Montgomery; River City Pub., 2001.

Necessary Acts. Montgomery; River City Pub., 2004.

Trosclair and the Alligator. New York; Star Bright Books, 2006.

In the Company of Owls. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2008.

South. Alabama; Solomon & George, 2013.

Audubon's Engraver. Alabama; Solomon & George, 2015.

A Gift of Air. Alabama; Solomon & George, 2016.

Thibodeaux and the Fish. Alabama; Solomon & George, 2017.

Small Mercies. Alabama; Solomon & George, 2021.
Jones, Rodney (Thumbnail).jpg Rodney Jones Jones, Rodney
1950-present

Rodney Jones had a rural upbringing in northern Alabama and started writing poems in high school. He completed his bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Alabama in 1971 and continued writing poetry, selling three of his poems to The Atlantic Monthly in 1972. Jones then obtained an MFA from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1973 before pursuing a career in education while continuing to write. He was an English professor at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale until 2012. Jones's profound impact on contemporary poetry is evidenced by his numerous accolades, including the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Peter I.B. Lavan Award, and the Harper Lee Award, accompanied by prestigious fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Jones now lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, and teaches in the low-residency MFA program at Warren Wilson College.

Rodney Jones is primarily a poet and draws inspiration from the oral storytelling tradition present where he grew up in rural Alabama. His works include themes like memory and the power of the past. Going Ahead, Looking Back. Knoxville; Southbound Books, 1977.

The Story they Told Us of Light. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1980.

The Unborn. Boston; Atlantic Monthly Press, 1985.

Transparent Gestures. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1989.

Apocalyptic Narrative, and Other Poems. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1993.

Things that Happen Once: New Poems. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1996.

Elegy for the Southern Drawl. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1999.

Kingdom of the Instant. New York; HarperCollins, 2004.

Salvation Blues: One Hundred Poems, 1985-2002. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 2006.

Imaginary Logic. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 2011.

Village Prodigies. New York; HarperCollins, 2017.
Bensko, John (Thumbnail).png John Bensko Bensko, John
1949-present

John Bensko was born in Birmingham, Alabama. He earned a BA and MFA from the University of Alabama before continuing his studies at Florida State University. Bensko obtained his PhD in 20th-century poetry and narrative technique from FSU in 1985. His debut volume of poetry, Green Soldiers, was published in 1981. It was chosen by Richard Hugo for the Yale Series of Younger Poets award that same year. Bensko taught at the University of Alabama, Old Dominion University, Rhodes College, and as a Fulbright Professor in American Literature at the University of Alicante, Spain, before his current position as an English professor at the University of Memphis. He has been instrumental in developing the MFA and undergraduate creative writing programs at the University of Memphis. He has also launched a summer program in creative writing at the Universidad de Alicante through the Study Abroad Office.

John Bensko is a poet who writes about a broad range of topics, including marriage, family, war, and the South. He frequently connects singular experiences to history in his works. Green Soldiers. New Haven; Yale University Press, 1981.

The Waterman's Children. Amherst; University of Massachusetts Press, 1994.

The Iron City. Champaign; University of Illinois Press, 2000.

Sea Dogs. Minneapolis; Graywolf Press, 2004.

Visitations. Tampa; University of Tampa Press, 2014.

Covington, Dennis (Thumbnail).jpg Dennis Covington Covington, Dennis
1948-2024

Dennis Covington was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. He pursued his passion for writing at the University of Virginia and earned his bachelor’s degree. After serving in the United States Army, Covington furthered his education by completing an MFA at the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Covington then returned to Birmingham, teaching English and engaging in theater. In 1983, he began working as a war correspondent, taking many trips to El Salvador over the course of six years. 1991 marked the publication of his first novel, Lizard, which he began while completing his MFA. In 1995, he ventured into nonfiction and wrote the acclaimed book Salvation on Sand Mountain. Covington joined Texas Tech University in 2004 as a creative writing professor, and he became a columnist for The American Scholar in 2017. He died in 2024 from complications of dementia.

Dennis Covington was a journalist and writer of fiction and nonfiction. He was known for writing about the South and his personal life. His fiction involves coming-of-age themes like family. Lizard. New York; Delacorte Press, 1991.

Lasso the Moon.New York; Delacorte Press, 1995.

Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake-Handling and Salvation in Southern Appalachia. Reading, Mass.; Addison-Wesley, 1995.

Redneck Riviera: Armadillos, Outlaws, and the Demise of an American Dream. New York; Counterpoint, 2004.

Revelation: A Search for Faith in a Violent Religious World. New York; Little, Brown, 2016.

Joint Publication:

Cleaving: The Story of a Marriage.New York; North Point Press, 1999.
Patterson, Richard_North (Thumbnail).jpg Richard North Patterson Patterson, Richard North
1947-present

Richard North Patterson was born in Berkeley, California, and raised in Bay Village, Ohio. He completed his undergraduate studies at Ohio Wesleyan University and obtained a JD from Case-Western Reserve University School of Law. After working for the Office of the Attorney General of Ohio and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Patterson settled in Birmingham, Alabama, where he became a partner in a law firm. While attending creative writing classes at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, he began writing his first novel, The Lasko Tangent, which was published in 1979. After a hiatus from writing in the mid-1980s, Patterson resumed his writing career, achieving success with the bestselling novel Degree of Guilt in 1993, after which he transitioned to full-time writing. His contributions have earned him various accolades, including the Edgar Allan Poe Award and the Grand Prix de Litterature Policiere. Today, Patterson divides his time between San Francisco and Martha's Vineyard.

Richard North Patterson is primarily a novelist. His works often deal with political issues. Lasko Tangent. New York; Norton, 1979.

Outside Man. Boston; Little, Brown, 1981.

Escape the Night. New York; Random, 1983.

Private Screening. New York; Villard Books, 1985.

Degree of Guilt. New York; Knopf, 1993.

Eyes of a Child. New York; Knopf, 1995.

Silent Witness. New York; Knopf, 1996.

The Final Judgment. New York; Knopf, 1996.

No Safe Place. New York; Knopf, 1998.

Dark Lady. New York; Ballantine Books, 1999.

Protect and Defend. New York; Ballantine Books, 2000.

Balance of Power. London; Pan Books, 2003.

Conviction. New York; Ballantine Books, 2005.

Exile. New York; Henry Holt, 2007.

The Race. New York; Henry Holt, 2007.

Eclipse. New York; Henry Holt, 2009.

The Spire. New York; Henry Holt, 2009.

In the Name of Honor. New York; Henry Holt, 2010.

The Devil's Light. New York; Scribner, 2011.

Fall from Grace. New York; Scribner, 2012.

Loss of Innocence. London; Quercus, 2013.

Eden in Winter. Thorndike, Maine; Center Point Publishing, 2014.

Fever Swamp: A Journey Through the Strange Neverland of the 2016 Presidential Race. London; Quercus, 2017.

Trial. Nashville, Tenn.; Post Hill Press, 2023.
Cook, Thomas_H (Thumbnail).jpg Thomas H. Cook Cook, Thomas H.
1947-present

Thomas H. Cook was a native of Fort Payne, Alabama, who developed a passion for writing during his childhood. He earned his bachelor’s degree in English and philosophy from Georgia State College in 1969 and then obtained a master’s degree in American history from Hunter College in 1972. Cook also obtained a master’s degree in philosophy from Columbia University in 1976 before moving back to Georgia, where he taught English and history at Dekalb Community College and worked for the Atlanta magazine. His first novel, Blood Innocents, was published in 1980, and he began writing full-time in 1982. Cook currently resides with his family in Cape Cod and New York City.

Thomas H. Cook writes short stories and novels. Many of his works are set in the rural South and are written in the genres of true crime and mystery. Blood Innocents. New York; Playboy Press, 1980.

The Orchids. Boston; Houghton, 1982.

Tabernacle. Boston; Houghton, 1982.

Elena. Boston; Houghton, 1984.

Sacrificial Ground. New York; Putnam, 1988.

Flesh and Blood. New York; Putnam, 1989.

Streets of Fire. New York; Putnam, 1989.

Early Graves: A Shocking True-Crime Story of the Youngest Woman Ever Sentenced to Death Row. New York; Dalton, 1990.

Night Secrets. New York; Putnam, 1990.

Evidence of Blood. New York; Putnam, 1991.

The City When it Rains. New York; Putnam, 1991.

Blood Echoes: The True Story of an Infamous Mass Murder and Its Aftermath. New York; Dutton, 1992.

Mortal Memory. New York; G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1993.

Breakheart Hill. New York; Bantam, 1995.

The Chatham School Affair. New York; Bantam, 1996.

Instruments of Night. New York; Bantam, 1998.

Places in the Dark. New York; Bantam, 2000.

Taken: A Novelization. New York; Dell, 2002.

The Interrogation. New York; Bantam, 2002.

Into the Web. New York; Bantam, 2004.

Peril. New York; Bantam, 2004.

Red Leaves. San Diego; Harcourt, 2005.

The Murmur of Stones. London; Quercus, 2006.

The Cloud of Unknowing. San Diego; Harcourt, 2007.

Master of the Delta. San Diego; Harcourt, 2008.

The Fate of Katherine Carr. New York; HarperCollins, 2009.

The Last Talk with Lola Faye. Boston; Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010.

The Quest for Anna Klein. Boston; Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011.

The Crime of Julian Wells. New York; Mysterious Press, 2012.

Fatherhood and Other Stories. New York; Pegasus Press, 2013.

Sandrine's Case. New York; Mysterious Press, 2013.

A Dancer in the Dust. New York; Grove Atlantic/Mysterious, 2015.

Even Darkness Sings. New York; Pegasus Press, 2018.

Joint Publications:

Moon Over Manhattan. New York; New Millennium Press, 2003.

The Best American Crime Reporting 2008. New York; Harper Perennial, 2008.
Hasford, Gustav (Thumbnail).jpg Gustav Hasford Hasford, Gustav
1947-1993

Gustav Hasford was raised in Russellville, Alabama, and displayed an early passion for literature and journalism. He gained experience in writing and editing through his school newspaper and part-time work at local papers. After leaving high school, Hasford enlisted in the United States Marines and served as a military journalist in Vietnam. Upon his discharge, he moved to Longview, Washington, where he pursued a variety of jobs while dedicating time to writing. He relocated to southern California in the early 1970s and began working on a novel about his Vietnam experience. This novel, The Short-Timers, was published in 1979 and later adapted into the film Full Metal Jacket. Even after experiencing legal troubles and spending a few months in jail, Hasford continued writing and published two more novels before he passed away in Greece in 1993.

Gustav Hasford was the author of two Vietnam War novels and one satirical detective novel. The film Full Metal Jacket was an adaptation of Hasford's first Vietnam War novel.

The Short-Timers. New York; Harper, 1979.

The Phantom Blooper. New York; Bantam Books, 1990.

A Gypsy Good Time. New York; Washington Square Press, 1992.

Joint Publication:

Full Metal Jacket: The Screenplay. New York; Knopf, 1987.
Charles Ghigna.png Charles Ghigna Ghigna, Charles
1946-present

Charles Ghigna is originally from Bayside, New York, but relocated to Fort Myers, Florida, at a young age. His passion for writing poetry began in childhood and was encouraged by a high school teacher who urged him to keep a writing journal. Ghigna pursued higher education, earning a bachelor’s degree from Florida Atlantic University in 1967 and a master’s degree in education in 1970. He taught English in Fort Myers before moving to Birmingham, Alabama, in 1974, where he taught creative writing and served as poet-in-residence at the Alabama School of Fine Arts. Ghigna's extensive literary career includes publishing poetry in national magazines, writing children's books, and receiving notable awards and nominations. He is affectionately known as "Father Goose" for his engaging school readings. He currently lives and writes in a treehouse in Homewood, Alabama, near Birmingham.

Charles Ghigna, also known as "Father Goose," is a poet best known for his work in children's literature. He writes poems and books for children covering a wide range of topics that includes nature, humor, school, and more. He also writes poetry for adults. Plastic Tears. Philadelphia; Dorrance, 1973.

Stables; the Story of Christmas; Poems and Prints. Birmingham, Ala.; Creekwood Press, 1975.

Cockroach: A One-Act Play. Chicago; Contemporary Drama Service, 1977.

Divers and Other Poems. Alabama; Creekwood Press, 1978.

Circus Poems. Alabama; Creekwood Press, 1979.

Returning to Earth. Alabama; Livingston University Press, 1989.

Father Songs. Alabama; Creekwood Press, 1989.

Good Dogs, Bad Dogs. Westport, CT; Hyperion, 1992.

Good Cats, Bad Cats. New York; Hyperion, 1992.

Wings of Fire. New York; Druid, 1992.

Best of 'Snickers,' Best of Times. Birmingham; Best of Times, 1994.

Speaking in Tongues: New and Selected Poems, 1974-1994. Alabama; Livingston University Press, 1994.

Tickle Day: Poems from Father Goose. New York; Hyperion, 1994.

The Day I Spent the Night in the Shelby County Jail. Alabama; Best of Times, 1994.

Riddle Rhymes. New York; Hyperion, 1995.

Animal Trunk: Silly Poems to Read Aloud. New York; Abrams, 1999.

Love Poems. Birmingham, Ala.; Crane Hill Publishers, 1999.

Mice are Nice. New York; Random House, 1999.

Plastic Soup: Dream Poems.Montgomery, Ala.; Black Belt, 1999.

See the Yak-Yak.New York; Random House, 1999.

Christmas Is Coming. Watertown, Mass.; Charlesbridge, 2000.

Haiku: The Travelers of Eternity. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Press, 2001.

One Hundred Shoes. New York; Random House, 2002.

The Alphabet Parade. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Press, 2002.

A Fury of Motion: Poems For Boys. New York; Boyds Mills Press, 2003.

Halloween Night: Twenty-One Spooktacular Poems. Philadelphia, Penn.; Running Press, 2003.

Animal Tracks: Wild Poems to Read Aloud. New York; Abrams, 2004.

Dylan the Smokey Dragon. Jackson, Miss.; Maris, West & Baker, 2005.

Halloween Night. New York; Scholastic, 2005.

If You Were My Valentine. New York; Simon & Schuster, 2005.

Love Poems: Mini Edition. Springville, Utah; Sweet Water Press, 2005.

Oh My, Pumpkin Pie! New York; Random House, 2005.

Greatest Hits: Poems 1974-2005. Ohio; Pudding House, 2006.

Halloween Night: Mini Edition. Philadelphia, Penn.; Running Press, 2006.

Love Poems. Birmingham, Ala.; Crane Hill Publishers, 2007.

Score! 50 Poems to Motivate and Inspire. New York; Abrams, 2008.

Snow Wonder. New York; Random House, 2008.

Barn Storm. New York; Random House, 2010.

Halloween Mice. uTales, 2011.

I See Winter. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2011.

I See Fall. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2011.

I See Summer. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2011.

I See Spring. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2011.

Can You Keep a Silly Secret. Indianapolis, Ind.; U.S. Kids, 2012.

Little Seeds. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2012.

Pick Up the Park: My Little Planet. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2012.

Recycling Is Fun: My Little Planet. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2012.

The Magic Behind the Screen. Birmingham, Ala.; PBS/APT, 2012.

We Need Water. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2012.

Numbers In the Park. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2014.

Shapes Are Everywhere. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2014.

The Wonders of The Color Wheel. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2014.

A Carnival of Cats. Victoria, B.C.; Orca, 2015.

Adeline Porcupine. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

A Windy Day in Spring. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

Bobby Bear. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

Cuddle Bunny. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

Hail To Spring. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

Lucy Goose. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

Raindrops Fall All Around. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

Sunshine Brightens Springtime. Mankato, Minn.; Capstone, 2015.

A Parade of Puppies. Victoria, B.C.; Orca, 2016.

Kitty Goes. Chicago, Ill.; Cricket Books, 2016.

Strange, Unusual, Gross & Cool Animals: Animal Planet. New York; Time Inc., 2016.

Addition. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Count By 10 to 100. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Dial 9-1-1: Fire Safety. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Even Numbers. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

First Times. Victoria, B.C.; Orca, 2017.

Get Out, Stay Out: Fire Safety. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Little Bee, Little Bee. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Little Cow, Little Cow. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Little Lion, Little Lion. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Little Puppy, Little Puppy. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Little Seal, Little Seal. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Little Squirrel, Little Squirrel. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Making 10. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Odd Numbers. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Plan and Prepare: Fire Safety. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Stop Drop and Roll! Fire Safety. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Subtraction. New York; Cantata Learning, 2017.

Alabama: My Home Sweet Home. Atlanta, Ga.; Whitman, 2018.

The Night the Forest Came To Town. Victoria, B.C.; Orca, 2018.

Who Can? Victoria, B.C.; Orca, 2018.

Dear Poet: Notes To a Young Writer. Eugene, Ore.; Resource Publications, 2019.

Illusions: Poetry & Art for The Young At Heart. Eugene, Ore.; Resource Publications, 2019.

Stones: The Collected Short Poems of Charles Ghigna. Pennsylvania; Canopic, 2019.

Once Upon Another Time. Minneapolis, Minn.; Beaming Books, 2020.

A Poem Is a Firefly. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2021.

Artwords: Artists & Poets: Portraits In Verse Eugene, Ore.; Resource Publications, 2021.

Love Is Everything. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2021.

The Truth About Trees. Mobile, Ala.; Negative Capability Press, 2021.

Fetch Cat Fetch. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2022.

Little Hearts. New York; Red Comet Press, 2022.

The Father Goose Treasury of Poetry For Children. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2023.

Bound To Dream: An Immigrant Story. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2024.

The Magic Box: A Book of Opposites. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2024.

Southern Bred: A Memoir of Poems. Chicago, Ill.; Central Avenue Publishing, 2025.

Sweet Dreams: Moon Poems. Atglen, Penn.; Schiffer Kids, 2025.
Gaillard, Frye (Thumbnail).jpg Frye Gaillard Gaillard, Frye
1946-present

Frye Gaillard is a native of Mobile, Alabama. He pursued a career in journalism after earning his bachelor’s degree in history from Vanderbilt University in 1968. Gaillard worked for publications such as Race Relations Reporter in Nashville, Tennessee, and The Charlotte Observer in North Carolina during his journalism career. He later transitioned to teaching, becoming an instructor in nonfiction writing at Queens College in 1990. Throughout his prolific career, he has authored or co-authored over twenty books, covering a wide range of topics such as country music and southern culture. Notably, his work The Dream Long Deferred was adapted into a documentary film in 1991. Gaillard's contributions extend beyond nonfiction, as he collaborated with singer-songwriter Kathryn Scheldt and co-wrote ten songs featured on her album Southern Girl. Currently, Gaillard resides on the Gulf Coast of Alabama near Mobile.

Frye Gaillard writes in the nonfiction genre. Topics of his books range from country music to politics to southern culture. Watermelon Wine: The Spirit of Country Music. New York; St. Martin's Press, 1978. Rpt. as Watermelon Wine: Remembering the Golden Years of Country Music. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2004.

Race, Rock & Religion: Profiles from a Southern Journalist. Charlotte, N.C.; East Woods Press, 1982.

The Dream Long Deferred. Chapel Hill; University of North Carolina Press, 1988. Rpt. as The Dream Long Deferred: The Landmark Struggle for Desegregation in Charlotte, North Carolina. Columbia; University of South Carolina Press, 2006.

Southern Voices. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 1991.

Kyle at 200 MPH: A Sizzling Season in the Petty/NASCAR Dynasty. New York; St. Martin’s Press, 1993.

If I Were a Carpenter: Twenty Years of Habitat for Humanity. Winston-Salem, N.C.; John F. Blair, 1996.

The Heart of Dixie: Southern Rebels, Renegades and Heroes. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 1996.

Voices from the Attic. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 1997.

As Long as the Waters Flow: Native Americans in the South and the East. Winston-Salem, N.C.; John F. Blair, 1998.

Cradle of Freedom: Alabama and the Movement That Changed America. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2004.

Prophet from Plains: Jimmy Carter & His Legacy. Athens; University of Georgia Press, 2007.

With Music and Justice for All: Some Southerners and Their Passions. Nashville; Vanderbilt University Press, 2008.

Alabama’s Civil Rights Trail. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2010.

The Books That Mattered: A Readers Memoir. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2013.

Journey to the Wilderness: War, Memory, and a Southern Family’s Civil War Letters. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2015.

Go South to Freedom. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2016.

A Hard Rain: America in the 1960s, Our Decade of Hope, Possibility and Innocence Lost. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2018.

Live As If… A Teacher’s Love Story. Mobile; Negative Capability Press, 2020.

Joint Publications:

The Catawba River. Boiling Springs, N.C.; Gardner-Webb University Press, 1983.

The Secret Diary of Mikhail Gorbachev: A Mystery Novel. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 1990.

Lessons from the Big House: One Family's Passage through the History of the South: A Memoir. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 1994.

The Way We See It: Documentary Photography by the Children of Charlotte. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 1995.

The 521 All-Stars: A Championship Story of Baseball and Community. Montgomery; Black Belt Publishing, 1999.

Spacechimp: NASA’s Ape in Space. Berkeley Heights, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 2000.

The Greensboro Four: Civil Rights Pioneers. North Carolina; Main Street Books, 2001.

Mobile and the Eastern Shore. Mount Pleasant, S.C.; Arcadia Publishing, 2003.

In the Path of the Storms. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2008.

The Quilt: And the Poetry of Alabama Music. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2015.

The Slave Who Went to Congress. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2020.

Ezra Wants to Know: The True Story of the Rosenwald Schools. United Kingdom; Intellect Publishing, 2022.

The Southernization of America: A Story of Democracy in the Balance. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2022.
Buffett_Jimmy_thumbnail.jpg Jimmy Buffett Buffett, Jimmy
1946-2023

Jimmy Buffett was born in Mississippi in 1946 and raised in Mobile, Alabama. After graduating in 1969 from the University of Southern Mississippi with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Buffett had a successful career as a musician and writer. His deep connection to Alabama and the Gulf Coast greatly influenced his writing, infusing it with a sense of place and adventure. Starting with Tales From Margaritaville (1989), a best-selling collection of short stories partially based on his songs, Buffett went on to write novels like Where is Joe Merchant? (1992) and A Salty Piece Of Land (2004). In his autobiography, A Pirate Looks At Fifty (1998), Buffett shares his personal journey from a young boy in Alabama to a renowned artist. Buffett died in 2023.

Jimmy Buffett was primarily a singer-songwriter, but he also wrote short stories, novels, children's books, and nonfiction. His fiction and nonfiction often feature Caribbean settings. Tales from Margaritaville. San Diego; Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989.

Where is Joe Merchant? New York; Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1992.

Parrot Head Handbook. New York; Universal City, Calif.; MCI, 1992.

Daybreak on the Equator. New York; Random House, 1997.

A Pirate Looks at Fifty. New York; Random House, 1998.

A Salty Piece of Land. Boston; Little, Brown and Co., 2004.

Swine Not! Boston; Little, Brown and Co., 2008.

Joint Publications:

Jolly Mon. San Diego; Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1988.

Trouble Dolls. San Diego; Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1991.
Wolff, Tobias (Thumbnail).jpg Tobias Wolff Wolff, Tobias
1945-present

Tobias Wolff was born in Birmingham, Alabama, but moved frequently during his childhood, living in places like Florida, Utah, and Washington. Wolff served in the United States Army for four years before enrolling at Oxford University, where he earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English. His first novel, Ugly Rumors, was published in 1975 and was loosely based on his experiences in the war in Vietnam. Wolff earned a master’s degree from Stanford University in 1978 and then began a career in higher education, teaching briefly at Goddard College and Arizona State University before settling down at Syracuse University, where he taught for seventeen years. Over the years, he has published short story collections, memoirs, and another novel. He is currently the emeritus Ward W. and Priscilla B. Woods Professor at Stanford University.

Tobias Wolff writes short stories, novels, and memoirs. His works are characterized by their exploration of the personal and the existential. Ugly Rumours. London; Allen & Unwin, 1977.

Hunters in the Snow. New York; Random House, 1981.

In the Garden of the North American Martyrs. New York; Eco Press, 1981.

The Barracks Thief. New York; Eco Press, 1984.

Back in the World. Boston; Houghton, 1985.

This Boy's Life: A Memoir. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989.

In Pharoah's Army: Memories of the Lost War. New York; Knopf, 1994.

The Night in Question. New York; Knopf, 1996.

Old School. New York; Vintage Books, 2003.

Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories. New York; Vintage Books, 2008.
Smith, Lee (Thumbnail).jpg Lee Smith Smith, Lee
1944-present

Lee Smith is a native of Grundy, Virginia, a small mountain town. She earned her bachelor’s degree from Hollins College (now Hollins University) in 1967 and won a writing grant from the Book-of-the-Month Club, which led to the publication of her debut novel The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed in 1968. Smith then moved to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and worked at The Tuscaloosa News while continuing to write novels. She later moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and embarked on a teaching career in addition to her writing. In 1981, Smith began teaching at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, where she remained until her retirement in 2000. Today, Smith continues to write and live in Hillsborough, North Carolina.

Lee Smith writes novels and short stories. She often incorporates her background as a southern woman into her works. The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed. New York; Harper & Row, 1968.

Something in the Wind. New York; Harper & Row, 1971.

Fancy Strut. New York; Harper & Row, 1973.

Black Mountain Breakdown. New York; Putnam, 1980.

Cakewalk. New York; Putnam, 1981.

Oral History. New York; Putnam, 1983.

Family Linen. New York; Putnam, 1985.

Bob, A Dog. North Carolina; Mud Puppy Press, 1988.

Fair and Tender Ladies. New York; Ballantine Books, 1989.

Me and My Baby View the Eclipse. New York; Putnam, 1989.

The Devil's Dream. New York; Putnam, 1992.

Saving Grace. New York; Ballantine Books, 1995.

The Christmas Letters. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 1996.

News of the Spirit New York; Putnam, 1997.

The Last Girls: A Novel. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 2002.

On Agate Hill: A Novel. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 2006.

Mrs. Darcy and the Blue-Eyed Stranger. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 2010.

Guests on Earth. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 2013.

Dimestore: A Writer's Life. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 2016.

Blue Marlin. Winston-Salem, N.C.; John F. Blair, 2020.

Silver Alert. Chapel Hill, N.C.; Algonquin Books, 2023.
King, Cassandra (Thumbnail).jpg Cassandra King King, Cassandra
1944-present

Cassandra King was born and raised in the rural community of Pinckard, Alabama. She earned her bachelor’s degree in English from Alabama College (now University of Montevallo) in 1967 and later returned to earn an MFA. Her thesis project served as the foundation for her 1995 debut novel, Making Waves in Zion. King taught at various universities for several years but transitioned to writing full-time in 1998. With several published works, including The Sunday Wife, under her belt, King currently resides in Beaufort, South Carolina.

Cassandra King writes novels, short stories, nonfiction, articles, and essays. Her novels are often told in first person and set in small-town Alabama. Themes in her works include change and courage. Making Waves in Zion. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 1995.

The Sunday Wife. New York; Hyperion, 2002.

The Same Sweet Girls. New York; Hyperion, 2005.

Queen of Broken Hearts. New York; Hyperion, 2007.

Moonrise. New York; Maiden Lane Press, 2013.

The Same Sweet Girls Guide to Life. New York; Maiden Lane Press, 2014.

Tell Me A Story: My Life With Pat Conroy. New York; Morrow, 2019.
Flagg, Fannie (Thumbnail).jpg Fannie Flagg Flagg, Fannie
1944-present

Fannie Flagg, originally known as Patricia Neal, was born and raised in Irondale, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama. She attended the University of Alabama and the Pittsburgh Playhouse drama school before working a variety of jobs, including co-hosting a morning show, making comedy albums, and acting in television shows, movies, and plays. She transitioned to writing full-time in the 1980s, with her first novel, Coming Attractions, being published in 1981. In 2001, Flagg won the Alabama State Council on the Arts Distinguished Artist Award, and in 2012, she won the Harper Lee Award.

Fannie Flagg writes short stories and novels that focus on small-town life. She tends to write strong female characters that question the racial and gender inequities they see around them. Coming Attractions: A Wonderful Novel. New York; Random House, 1981. rpt. Daisy Fay and the Miracle Man, 1992.

Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle-Stop Café. New York; Random House, 1987.

Fannie Flagg's Original Whistle-Stop Café Cookbook. New York; Fawcett, 1993.

Welcome to the World, Baby Girl! New York; Random House, 1998.

Standing in the Rainbow. New York; Random House, 2002.

A Redbird Christmas. New York; Random House, 2004.

Can't Wait to Get to Heaven. New York; Random House, 2006.

I Still Dream About You. New York; Random House, 2010.

The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion. New York; Random House, 2013.

The Whole Town's Talking. New York; Random House, 2016.

The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop. New York; Random House, 2020.

Joint Publications:

Daily Word: Love, Inspiration, and Guidance for Everyone. Emmaus, Pa.; Daybreak Books, 1997.
Inman_Robert_thumbnail.jpg Robert Inman Inman, Robert
1943-present

Robert Inman is a native of Elba, Alabama. He pursued a career in journalism after graduating from the University of Alabama with a bachelor’s degree in radio-television journalism in 1965. His experience as a reporter and as a press secretary to Governor Albert Brewer shaped his understanding of media and communication. Inman returned to the University of Alabama and completed the MFA program in 1979, leading to him pursuing fiction writing in his spare time. His acclaimed debut novel, Home Fires Burning, garnered attention from the Hallmark Hall of Fame television production company and was adapted for the screen. He subsequently focused on fiction writing and screenwriting while also maintaining his engagement with journalism for many years through a weekly column for the Charlotte Observer. In the early 2000s, Inman branched out and began writing stage plays. He continues to live and write in Conover and Boone, North Carolina.

Robert Inman writes novels, screenplays, stage plays, essays, and columns. His works are often set in small towns and include themes like family and community. A Note in Closing. Charlotte; Hometown Press, 1985.

Home Fires Burning. Boston; Little, Brown, 1987.

My Friend Delbert Earle and Other Notes in Closing: Television Essays. Charlotte; Hometown Press, 1989.

Old Dogs and Children. Boston; Little, Brown, 1991.

Dairy Queen Days. Boston; Little, Brown, 1997.

Coming Home: Life, Love and All Things Southern. Asheboro, N.C.; Down Home Press, 2000.

Captain Saturday. Boston; Little, Brown, 2002.

Crossroads. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2003.

The Christmas Bus. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2003.

Dairy Queen Days. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2005.

The Christmas Bus: The Musical. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2006.

Welcome to Mitford. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2007.

A High Country Christmas. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2008.

The Drama Club. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2009.

The Governor's Lady. Winston-Salem, N.C.; John F. Blair, 2013.

Liberty Mountain. Woodstock, Ill.; Dramatic Publishing, 2014.
Homer_Hickam.jpg Homer Hickam Hickam, Homer
1943-present

Homer Hickam is a native of the coal mining community of Coalwood, West Virginia. He exhibited a keen interest in storytelling and avidly consumed science fiction literature during his formative years. Encouraged by his admiration for rocket scientist Dr. Wernher von Braun, Hickam and a group of friends constructed and launched their own rockets following the launch of the Soviet satellite Sputnik in 1957. After earning a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and serving in the United States Army, Hickam became a government engineer, working for various agencies, including NASA. Since retiring from engineering, Hickam has devoted his time to writing. He has published several fiction and nonfiction books, the first of which was published in 1998. He continues to write and currently resides in Huntsville, Alabama.

Homer Hickam writes nonfiction and fiction books based on his diverse interests, which include history, war, science, and space. Many of his works are rooted in his West Virginia hometown. Torpedo Junction. Maryland; Naval Institute Press, 1989.

Back to the Moon. New York; Random House, 1999.

Rocket Boys. New York; Dell, 1998. Published as October Sky, 1999.

The Coalwood Way. New York; Delacorte Press, 2000.

Sky of Stone. New York; Delacorte Press, 2001.

We Are Not Afraid: Strength and Courage from the Town That Inspired the #1 Best Seller and Award-Winning Movie "October Sky". Florida; Health Communications, Inc., 2002.

The Keeper's Son. New York; Thomas Dunne Books, 2003.

The Ambassador's Son. New York; Thomas Dunne Books, 2005.

Red Helmet. Nashville, Tenn.; Thomas Nelson, 2007.

The Far Reaches. New York; Thomas Dunne Books, 2007.

The Dinosaur Hunter. New York; Thomas Dunne Books, 2010.

Crater. Nashville, Tenn.; Thomas Nelson, 2012.

Paco: The Cat Who Meowed in Space. California; CreateSpace, 2012.

Crescent. Nashville, Tenn.; Thomas Nelson, 2013.

From Rocket Boys to October Sky: How the Classic Memoir Rocket Boys Was Written and the Hit Movie October Sky Was Made. California; CreateSpace, 2013.

Crater Trueblood and the Lunar Rescue Company. Nashville, Tenn.; Thomas Nelson, 2014.

Carrying Albert Home: The Somewhat True Story of a Man, His Wife, and Her Alligator. New York; Morrow, 2016.

Don't Blow Yourself Up: The Further True Adventures and Travails of the Rocket Boy of October Sky. Nashville, Tenn.; Post Hill Press, 2021.

Joint Publication:

My Dream of Stars: From Daughter of Iran to Space Pioneer. New York; St. Martin’s Press, 2010.
Groom, Winston (Thumbnail).jpg Winston Groom Groom, Winston
1943-2020

Winston Groom was born in Washington, D.C., but spent his formative years in Mobile, Alabama. Despite initially intending to pursue a legal career, his passion for writing led him to graduate with a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Alabama in 1965. Groom's experience serving in the US Army and completing a thirteen-month tour of duty in Vietnam deeply influenced his literary works, including his critically acclaimed novel Better Times Than These and the widely recognized Forrest Gump, which was adapted into a successful film. His nonfiction tends to have military themes as well, including his Pulitzer-nominated book Conversations with the Enemy. Groom was inducted into the Alabama Authors Hall of Fame in 2018 before his death in 2020.

Winston Groom wrote novels and historical nonfiction. Common themes in his novels include the military, the South, and civil rights. He is best known for his novel Forrest Gump.

Better Times Than These: A Novel. New York; Summit Books, 1978.

As Summers Die. New York; Summit Books, 1980.

Conversations With the Enemy: The Story of PFC Robert Garwood. New York; Putnam, 1983.

Only. New York; Putnam, 1984.

Forrest Gump. New York; Doubleday, 1986.

Gone the Sun. New York; Doubleday, 1988.

Gumpisms: The Wit and Wisdom of Forrest Gump. New York; Pocket Books, 1994.

Shrouds of Glory: From Atlanta to Nashville, The Last Great Campaign of the Civil War. Boston; Atlantic Monthly Press, 1994.

Gump and Company. New York; Pocket Books, 1995.

Such a Pretty, Pretty Girl. New York; Random House, 1999.

The Crimson Tide: An Illustrated History of Football at the University of Alabama. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2000.

A Storm in Flanders: The Triumph and Tragedy on the Western Front. New York; Grove Press, 2002.

1942: The Year that Tried Men's Souls. New York; Grove Press, 2005.

Patriotic Fire: Andrew Jackson and Jean Laffite at the Battle of New Orleans. New York; Vintage, 2006.

Vicksburg, 1863. New York; Knopf, 2009.

The Crimson Tide: The Official Illustrated History of Alabama Football, National Championship Edition. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2010.

Kearny's March: The Epic Creation of the American West, 1846-1847. New York; Vintage, 2011.

Ronald Reagan: Our 40th President. Washington, D.C.; Regnery Publishing, 2012.

Shiloh, 1862. Washington, D.C.; National Geographic, 2012.

The Aviators: Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindbergh, and the Epic Age of Flight. Washington, D.C.; National Geographic, 2013.

The Generals: Patton, MacArthur, Marshall, and the Winning of World War II. Washington, D.C.; National Geographic, 2015.

El Paso. New York; Norton, 2016.

The Allies: Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin, and the Unlikely Alliance That Won World War II. Washington, D.C.; National Geographic, 2018.

The Patriots: Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and the Making of America. Washington, D.C.; National Geographic, 2020.
Naslund, Sena_Jeter (Thumbnail).jpg Sena Jeter Naslund Naslund, Sena Jeter
1942-present

Sena Jeter Naslund is a native of Birmingham, Alabama. She earned her bachelor’s degree in English and creative writing from Birmingham-Southern College in 1964 before obtaining her master’s degree and doctorate at the University of Iowa. Naslund subsequently embarked on a teaching career, joining faculty at the University of Montana briefly before accepting a position with the University of Louisville in 1972. In addition to teaching, Naslund focused on her writing career, publishing short stories in literary journals before publishing her first short story collection in 1989 and her first novel in 1993. Her bestselling novel Four Spirits is set in Birmingham, Alabama, during the civil rights movement. Naslund is also known for establishing the Louisville Review as a literary journal and founding Fleur-de-Lis Press to support emerging writers. Currently, she serves as the program director for the MFA in Creative Writing program at Spaulding University and holds the position of Distinguished Teaching Professor and Writer in Residence at the University of Louisville.

Sena Jeter Naslund writes short stories and novels. Her works center on the lives of real or fictional characters living in complicated times in the past. Many of her stories feature strong independent women overcoming difficult situations. Ice Skating at the North Pole: Stories. Bristol, R.I.; Ampersand Press, 1989.

Sherlock in Love: A Novel. Boston; David R. Godine, 1993.

The Animal Way to Love: A Novel. Bristol, R.I.; Ampersand Press, 1993.

Ahab's Wife, or, The Star-Gazer: A Novel. New York; William Morrow, 1999.

The Disobedience of Water: Stories and Novellas. Boston; D. R. Godine, 1999.

Four Spirits. New York; William Morrow, 2003.

Abundance: A Novel of Marie Antoinette. New York; William Morrow, 2006.

Adam & Eve. New York; William Morrow, 2010.

The Fountain of St. James Court; or, Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman. New York; William Morrow, 2013.
Hearne_Betsy_thumbnail.jpg Betsy Hearne Hearne, Betsy
1942-present

Betsy Hearne was born in Wilsonville, Alabama, and developed a passion for storytelling and writing from an early age. After completing her bachelor’s degree in history at the College of Wooster in Ohio, she embarked on a career as a children's librarian. Hearne returned to higher education and earned her master’s degree from the Graduate Library School of the University of Chicago in 1968. After graduating, Hearne became an influential children’s book reviewer, taught classes in children’s literature, and began writing for publication. Over the years, Hearne has published in a variety of genres, including young adult novels, short story collections, and children’s picture books. After obtaining her PhD from the Graduate Library School of the University of Chicago in 1985, Hearne joined the faculty as a professor. She later began teaching at the University of Illinois's School of Information Sciences, and she served as director of the Center for Children's Books at the University of Illinois from 1999 until her retirement in 2007.

Betsy Hearne writes children's books, young adult novels, poetry, short stories, and nonfiction. She draws inspiration from the rural South and her own experiences. South Star. New York; Atheneum, 1977.

Home. New York; Atheneum, 1979.

Beauties and Beasts. Phoenix, Ariz.; Oryx Books, 1984.

Love Lines: Poetry in Person. New York; Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1987.

Eli's Ghost. New York; Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1987.

Beauty and the Beast: Visions and Revisions of an Old Tale. Chicago; University of Chicago Press, 1989.

Polaroid and Other Poems of View. New York; Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1991.

Seven Brave Women. New York; Greenwillow, 1997.

Eliza's Dog. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1998.

Listening for Leroy. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1998.

Choosing Books for Children: Commonsense Guide. New York; Delacorte, 1981; 3rd edition, Illinois; University of Illinois Press, 1999.

Wishes, Kisses, and Pigs. New York; Aladdin, 2001.

The Canine Connection: Stories about Dogs and People. New York; Margaret K. McElderry Books, 2003.

Hauntings: And Other Tales of Danger, Love, and Sometimes Loss. New York; Greenwillow Books, 2007.
Gaines, Charles (Thumbnail).jpg Charles Gaines Gaines, Charles
1942-present

Charles Gaines was born in Jacksonville, Florida, but moved to Birmingham, Alabama during his childhood. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Birmingham-Southern College in 1963 and then spent two years living in Ireland and writing. Gaines then returned to higher education and earned his MFA from the University of Iowa Writer's Workshop in 1967. His debut novel, Stay Hungry, was published in 1972 and explores bodybuilding culture. It was later adapted into a film. Throughout his career, he authored nonfiction books, collaborated on screenplays, and ventured into entrepreneurship. Gaines also co-authored several fitness books for children with Arnold Schwarzenegger. Currently, Gaines divides his time between residences in Birmingham, Alabama, and Nova Scotia.

Charles Gaines writes fiction and nonfiction. His works are focused on his interests, which include fishing, upland bird hunting, mountaineering, and bodybuilding. Stay Hungry. New York; Doubleday, 1972.

Dangler. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1976.

Staying Hard: The Only Exercise Book You Will Ever Need. New York; Kenan Press, 1980.

Yours in Perfect Manhood, Charles Atlas; The Most Effective Fitness Program Ever Devised. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1982.

A Family Place; A Man Returns to the Center of his Life. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 1994.

Survival Games. New York; Atlantic Monthly Press, 1997.

The Next Valley Over: An Angler's Progress. New York; Crown Publishers, 2000.

Perspective. Maitland, Fla.; Xulon Press, 2006.

Waters Far and Near: Tales of Angling Adventure and Misadventure Around the World. Essex, Connecticut; Lyons Press, 2015.

Joint Publications:

Pumping Iron. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1974.

Pumping Iron II: The Unprecedented Woman. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1984.

In Search of Silver: The Greatest Writing on Atlantic Salmon Fishing. London; Duncan Baird Publishers, 2001.

Leaper: The Wonderful World of Atlantic Salmon Fishing. Essex, Connecticut; Lyons Press, 2001.

Ben Patterson: Born in the State of Flux/Us. Houston; Contemporary Art Museum, 2008.

Kerry James Marshall. New York; Phaidon Press, 2017.

Henry Taylor. New York; Rizzoli Electa, 2018.
Haskins, James (Thumbnail).jpg James Haskins Haskins, James
1941-2005

James Haskins was born in Demopolis, Alabama, while it was segregated. Denied access to public libraries, he relied on encyclopedias purchased by his mother and assistance from a white woman to obtain books. Haskins attended the prestigious Boston Latin School and later returned to Alabama for college. While attending Alabama State University, Haskins was expelled due to his participation in the civil rights movement. He then earned his bachelor’s degree in psychology from Georgetown University before returning to Alabama State University for a bachelor’s degree in history. Haskins continued in higher education, earning a master’s degree in social psychology from the University of New Mexico, before beginning his teaching career at a public school in Harlem in 1966. His experiences inspired his book Diary of a Harlem School Teacher and led to a prolific career as an author, writing over one hundred nonfiction books for various age groups. Haskins was a dedicated educator and taught at the Staten Island Community College before becoming a professor of English at the University of Florida. He continued teaching and writing until his death in 2005.

James Haskins wrote nonfiction books for both children and adults. He wrote about topics such as the Black American experience, history, and contemporary culture. Diary of a Harlem Schoolteacher. New York; Stein & Day, 1969.

Resistance; Profiles in Nonviolence. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1970.

The War and Protest. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1971.

Revolutionaries; Agents of Change. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1971.

A Piece of the Power; Four Black Mayors. New York; Dial Press, 1972.

Profiles in Black Power. Garden City, N.J.; Doubleday, 1972.

From Lew Alcindor to Kareem Abdul Jabbar. New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1972.

Jokes from Black Folks. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1973.

Black Manifesto for Education. New York; Morrow, 1973.

Religions. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1973.

Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback; a Biography. New York; Macmillan, 1973.

Adam Clayton Powell; Portrait of a Marching Black. New York; Dial Press, 1974.

Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron; the Home Run Kings. New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1974.

Street Gangs; Yesterday and Today. New York; Hastings House, 1974.

Jobs in Business and Office. New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1974.

Fighting Shirley Chisholm. New York; Dial Press, 1974.

Snow Sculpture and Ice Carving. New York; Macmillan, 1974.

Ralph Bunche, a Most Reluctant Hero. New York; Hawthorne Books, 1974.

Witchcraft, Mysticism and Magic in the Black World. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1974.

Your Rights, Past & Present. New York; Hawthorn Books, 1975.

The Consumer Movement. New York; F. Watts, 1975.

Dr. J.; a Biography of Julius Erving. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1975.

The Picture Life of Malcolm X. New York; F. Watts, 1975.

The Creoles of Color of New Orleans. New York; Crowell, 1975.

Always Moving On; the Life of Langston Hughes. New York; F. Watts, 1976.

The Long Struggle; the Story of American Labor. Philadelphia; Westminster, 1976.

Teenage Alcoholism. New York; Hawthorn, 1976.

A New Kind of Joy; the Story of the Special Olympics. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1976.

The Story of Stevie Wonder. New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1976.

Pel'e; a Biography. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1976.

The Cotton Club. New York; Random House, 1977.

Barbara Jordan. New York; Dial Press, 1977.

The Great American Crazies. New York; Condor, 1977.

The Life and Death of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1977.

George McGinnis; Basketball Superstar. New York; Hastings House, 1978.

Voodoo & Hoodoo; Their Tradition and Craft as Revealed by Actual Practitioners. New York; Stein & Day, 1978.

Who Are the Handicapped? Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1978.

Andrew Young, Man with a Mission. New York; Lothrop, Lee, & Shepard, 1979.

James Van DerZee; the Picture-Takin' Man. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1979.

Gambling: Who Really Wins? New York; F. Watts, 1979.

I'm Gonna Make You Love Me; the Story of Diana Ross. New York; Dial, 1980.

Minding the Children: Ford Foundation Assistance to Child-Care Programs. New York; Ford Foundation, 1980.

Scott Joplin; the Search for the Man. New York; Stein & Day, 1980.

Werewolves. New York; F. Watts, 1981.

Black Theater in America. New York; Crowell, 1982.

The Child Abuse Help Book. Reading, Mass.; Addison-Wesley, 1982.

"Magic," a Biography of Earvin Johnson. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1982.

Katherine Dunham. New York; Coward-McCann, 1982.

Sugar Ray Leonard. New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1982.

The New Americans; Cuban Boat People. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1982.

Bricktop. New York; Atheneum, 1983.

Donna Summer; an Unauthorized Biography. Boston; Little, Brown, 1983.

Lena Horne. New York; Coward-McCann, 1983.

The Guardian Angels. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1983.

Nat King Cole. New York; Stein & Day, 1984.

Richard Pryor, a Man and His Madness; a Biography. New York; Beaufort Books, 1984.

Space Challenger; the Story of Guion Bluford. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1984.

About Michael Jackson. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1985.

Break Dancing. Minneapolis; Lerner Publications, 1985.

Diana Ross; Star Supreme. New York; Viking Kestrel, 1985.

Leaders of the Middle East. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1985.

Double Dutch. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1985.

The Statue of Liberty, America's Proud Lady. Minneapolis, Minn.; Lerner, 1986.

Count Your Way Through China. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1987.

Count Your Way Through Russia. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1987.

Count Your Way Through the Arab World. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1987.

Queen of the Blues; a Biography of Dinah Washington. New York; Morrow, 1987.

Count Your Way Through Japan. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1987.

Mabel Mercer; a Life. New York; Atheneum, 1987.

Bill Cosby; America's Most Famous Father. New York; Walker, 1988.

Winnie Mandela; Life of Struggle. New York; Putman, 1988.

Shirley Temple Black; Actress to Ambassador. New York; Viking Kestrel, 1988.

Mr. Bojangles; the Biography of Bill Robinson. New York; William Morrow, 1988.

Count Your Way Through Africa. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1989.

India Under Indira and Rajiv Gandhi. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1989.

Count Your Way Through Korea. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1989.

Sports Great Magic Johnson. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow, 1989.

Count Your Way Through Mexico. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1989.

Count Your Way Through Canada. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1989.

Black Dance in America. New York; Crowell, 1990.

Count Your Way Through Germany. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1990.

Count Your Way Through India. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1990.

Count Your Way Through Israel. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1990.

Count Your Way Through Italy. Minneapolis; Carolrhoda Books, 1990.

Christopher Columbus: Admiral of the Ocean Sea. New York; Scholastic, 1991.

Ella Fitzgerald: A Life Through Jazz. London; Hodder & Stoughton, 1991.

Scatman; an Authorized Biography of Scatman Crothers. New York; W. Morrow and Co., 1991.

Against All Opposition; Black Explorers in America. New York; Walker, 1992.

I Am Somebody! A Biography of Jesse Jackson. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 1992.

I Have a Dream: The Life and Words of Martin Luther King, Jr. Minneapolis, Minn.; Lerner, 1992.

The Methodists. New York; Hippocrene Books, 1992.

Thurgood Marshall: A Life for Justice. New York; Henry Holt, 1992.

The March on Washington. New York; HarperCollins, 1993.

The Scottsboro Boys. New York; Henry Holt, 1994.

Black Eagles: African Americans in Aviation. New York; Scholastic, 1995.

Get on Board: The Story of the Underground Railroad. New York; Scholastic, 1995.

Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. New York; Walker, 1996.

Black, Blue & Gray: African Americans In The Civil War. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1998.

Separate But Not Equal: The Dream and the Struggle. New York; Scholastic, 1998.

Jesse Jackson: Civil Rights Activist. Hillside, N.J.; Enslow Publishers, 2000.

One Nation Under a Groove: Rap Music and Its Roots. Boston; Little, Brown, 2000.

Toni Morrison: Telling a Tale Untold. Minneapolis, Minn.; Twenty-First Century Books, 2002.

Delivering Justice: W.W. Law and the Fight for Civil Rights. Somerville, Mass.; Candlewick Press, 2005.

Joint Publications:

The Psychology of Black Language. New York; Barnes & Noble, 1973.

The Great American Crazies. New York; Condor, 1977.

He Will Lift up His Head. Washington D.C.; Developmental Disabilities Office, 1978.

Lena, a Personal and Professional Biography of Lena Horne. New York; Stein & Day, 1984.

Hippocrene U.S.A. Guide to Historic Black South: Historical Sites, Cultural Centers, and Musical Happenings of the African-American South. New York; Hippocrene Books, 1993.

From Afar to Zulu: A Dictionary of African Cultures. New York; Walker, 1995.

Bound for America: The Forced Migration of Africans to the New World. New York; HarperCollins, 1999.

Nat King Cole: The Man and His Music. Collingdale, Penn.; Diane Pub Co., 2000.

Building a New Land: African Americans in Colonial America. New York; Amistad Books, 2001.

Following Freedom's Star: The Story of the Underground Railroad. New York; Cavendish Square, 2002.
Finlay, John (Thumbnail).jpg John Finlay Finlay, John
1941-1991

John Finlay was a native of Ozark, Alabama, who grew up on his family’s farm near Enterprise, Alabama. Finlay pursued higher education at the University of Alabama, earning his bachelor’s degree in English in 1964 and his master’s degree in English in 1966. He taught for four years at the University of Montevallo before successfully pursuing a doctoral degree at Louisiana State University from 1970-1980. Following his conversion to Roman Catholicism, he returned to his family farm in 1981 and dedicated himself to writing and scholarship. Despite being diagnosed with AIDS in 1982, Finlay continued his creative and intellectual pursuits until his death in 1991. Posthumously, several collections of his poetry and essays were published.

John Finlay was a poet and essayist who wrote about Christian theology, nature, and life in the South. His poems were written in measured verse. Mind and Blood: The Collected Poems of John Finlay. Santa Barbara; J. Daniel, 1992.

Hermetic Light: Essays on the Gnostic Spirit in Modern Literature and Thought. Santa Barbara; J. Daniel, 1994.
Walker, Sue (Thumbnail).jpg Sue Walker Walker, Sue
1940-present

Sue Walker is a native of Foley, Alabama. After obtaining a bachelor’s degree in education from the University of Alabama, she briefly returned to Foley to teach high school English. She then enrolled at Tulane University and earned a master’s degree in education, a master’s degree in English literature, and a doctorate in English literature. In 1980, Walker began teaching at the University of South Alabama, and in 1981 she founded Negative Capability, a small literary journal, and Negative Capability Press, a notable publishing house. She has earned recognition for her poetry over the years, serving as the Alabama Poet Laureate from 2003 to 2012 and being named the Stokes Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing at the University of South Alabama.

Sue Walker is primarily a poet whose subjects include family relationships, love, war, sickness and healing, and the natural world. Her poems tend to be written in short lines and are both humorous and insightful. Traveling My Shadow. Alabama; Negative Capability Press, 1982.

Louisiana Creole Poems. Alabama; Negative Capability Press, 1982.

Shorings. California; South Coast Press, 1992.

The Appearance of Green. Troy, Maine; Nightshade Press, 1995.

Blood Must Bear Your Name. Amherst, Mass.; Amherst Writers & Artists Press, 2002.

It's Good Weather for Fudge: Conversing With Carson McCullers. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2003.

Joint Publication:

In the Realm of Rivers: Alabama's Mobile-Tensaw Delta. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2004.
Greenhaw, Wayne (Thumbnail).jpg Harold Wayne Greenhaw Greenhaw, Wayne
1940-2011

Harold Wayne Greenhaw was born in Sheffield, Alabama, but raised in Trussville and Tuscaloosa. He was inspired to become a writer after spending six months reading heavily while in a body cast after having a spine-correcting operation. Greenhaw studied creative writing in Mexico before enrolling at the University of Alabama, where he honed his writing skills under Hudson Strode. Greenhaw worked as a journalist for several publications, including The Tuscaloosa News and The Alabama Journal, while freelancing for national newspapers and magazines. He achieved literary success with his debut novel, The Golfer, in 1967, and went on to publish a diverse range of works encompassing fiction, nonfiction, poetry, plays, and screenplays. Throughout his career, Greenhaw also held editorial and teaching positions, sharing his expertise and fostering writing projects in correctional facilities. He died in 2011 due to heart surgery complications and was posthumously inducted into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame.

Harold Wayne Greenhaw wrote fiction and nonfiction books, poetry, plays, scripts for television and film, and even travel guides. Several of his books focus on Alabama and Montgomery in particular. Civil rights are a common theme in his works. The Golfer. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1967. Rpt. Montgomery; Sycamore Press, 1991.

The Making of a Hero: The Story of Lieut. William Calley, Jr. Louisville, Ky.; Touchstone Pub. Co., 1971.

Watch Out for George Wallace. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.; Prentice Hall, 1976.

Elephants in the Cottonfields; Ronald Reagan and the New Republican South. New York; Macmillan, 1982.

Flying High: Inside Big Time Drug Smuggling. New York; Dodd, 1984.

Alabama on My Mind: Politics, People, History, and Ghost Stories. Montgomery, Ala.; Sycamore Press, 1987.

Tombigee and Other Stories. Montgomery, Ala.; Sycamore Press, 1991.

Montgomery, the Biography of a City. Montgomery, Ala.; Advertiser Company, 1993.

King of Country. Montgomery, Ala.; Black Belt Press, 1994.

Alabama: Portrait of A State. Montgomery, Ala.; Black Belt Press, 1997.

Beyond the Night: A Remembrance. Montgomery, Ala.; Black Belt Press, 1999.

Alabama: A State of Mind. Montgomery, Ala.; Black Belt Press, 2000.

My Heart Is in the Earth: True Stories of Alabama and Mexico. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishers, 2001.

The Long Journey: A Novel. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishers, 2001.

Montgomery, the River City. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishers, 2002.

The Spider’s Web, A Novella and Other Stories. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishers, 2003.

Ghosts on the Road: Poems of Alabama, Mexico, and Beyond. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishers, 2007.

A Generous Life: W. James Samford Jr. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Publishers, 2009.

Fighting the Devil in Dixie: How Civil Rights Activists Took on the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama. Chicago; Lawrence Hill Books, 2011.

Joint Publication:

Montgomery, Center Stage in the South: A Contemporary Portrait. Chatsworth, Calif.; Windsor Publications, 1990.

Thunder of Angels: The Montgomery Bus Boycott and the People who Broke the Back of Jim Crow. Chicago; Lawrence Hill Press, 2006.
Gibbons, Faye (Thumbnail).jpg Faye Gibbons Gibbons, Faye
1938-present

Faye Gibbons was born in Carter Quarter, Georgia, but frequently moved with her family through the mountains and mill towns of northern Georgia. Her family didn’t have modern amenities like electricity, so storytelling became a cherished pastime. After attending school for the first time at the age of nine, Gibbons discovered her love of reading. She pursued higher education and earned a bachelor’s degree from Berry College in 1961. Gibbons taught in Georgia and Alabama before pausing her teaching career to raise a family and pursue a writing career. Her debut book, Some Glad Morning, was published in 1982, and she has since authored fiction and nonfiction works, engaging with readers through school visits and library events. Gibbons has received accolades such as the Georgia Book of the Year Award for juvenile fiction in 1983 and the Alabama Author Award in 1998. She currently resides in Deatsville, Alabama, actively contributing to literary communities and promoting the joy of reading and storytelling.

Faye Gibbons writes young adult novels, short stories, children's books, and nonfiction books. Her stories are often set in the South and inspired by her personal experiences. She explores difficult themes in her works like broken homes, poverty, and the importance of family. Some Glad Morning. New York; Morrow, 1982.

Mighty Close to Heaven. New York; Morrow, 1985.

King Shoes on Clown Pockets. New York; Morrow, 1989.

Breaking New Ground: The History of the Autauga Quality Cotton Association. Alabama; Black Belt Press, 1993.

Night in the Barn. New York; Morrow, 1995.

Mountain Wedding. New York; Morrow, 1996.

Hook Moon Light: Spooky Tales from the Georgia Mountains. New York; Morrow, 1997.

Mama and Me and the Model-T. New York; Morrow, 1999.

Emma Jo's Song. New York; Boyds Mills Press, 2001.

Hernando De Soto: A Search for Gold and Glory. Birmingham, Ala.; Crane Hill Publishers, 2002.

Full Steam Ahead. New York; Boyds Mills Press, 2002.

Horace King: Bridges to Freedom. Birmingham, Ala.; Crane Hill Publishers, 2002.

The Day the Picture Man Came. New York; Boyds Mills Press, 2003.
Fields, Julia (Thumbnail).jpg Julia Fields Fields, Julia
1938-present

Julia Fields hails from Perry County, Alabama. She grew up on a farm and developed a passion for reading and writing poetry from a young age. After graduating with a bachelor’s degree in English from Knoxville College in 1961, she taught in Birmingham while pursuing further education at Middlebury College and the University of Edinburgh. Fields gained national recognition with the publication of her poems in prominent magazines such as Negro Digest. In 1966, her first short story, titled “Ten to Seven,” was published in Negro Digest. Fields went on to receive prestigious fellowships and grants, including a Woodrow Wilson Teaching Fellowship, and in 1968 she published her first book of poetry. Fields completed her master’s degree in English in 1972 from Middlebury College. Over the years, Fields continued to write and publish additional books in genres like poetry and children’s literature while also teaching at various institutions. She currently resides in Washington, D.C.

Julia Fields writes poetry, short stories, children's books, and even a three-act play. Her poetry explores the Black experience through humor and dialect. I Heard a Young Man Saying. Michigan; Broadside Press, 1966.

Poems. New York; Poets Press, 1968.

A Summoning, A Shining. New York; Poets Press, 1968. rpt. Scotland Neck, N.C.: sn, 1976.

East of Moonlight. Charlotte; Red Clay Books, 1973.

Slow Coins. Washington, D.C.; Three Continents, 1981.

Green Lion of Zion Street. New York; McElderry Books, 1988.
Godwin, Gail (Thumbnail).jpg Gail Godwin Godwin, Gail
1937-present

Gail Godwin was born in Birmingham, Alabama, but raised in Asheville, North Carolina. Growing up in a household supported by her hardworking mother, Godwin immersed herself in reading and began writing at a young age. After completing a bachelor’s degree in journalism at the University of North Carolina, she became a reporter for a year in Miami and then worked at the US Embassy in London for several years. Later, she decided to pursue her passion for writing and obtained an MFA and a doctorate from the University of Iowa. Godwin has since authored numerous novels and short stories, earning accolades such as a 1975 Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2015, her autobiography Publishing: A Writer's Memoir was published. She continues to write from her home in Woodstock, New York.

Gail Godwin writes short stories, novels, and nonfiction. Her writing reflects her experiences and often involves themes of feminism and identity. The Perfectionists. New York; Harper, 1970.

Glass People. New York; Knopf, 1972.

The Odd Woman. New York; Knopf, 1974.

Dream Children: Stories. New York; Knopf, 1976.

Violet Clay. New York; Knopf, 1978.

A Mother and Two Daughters. New York; Viking, 1982.

Mr. Bedford and the Muses. New York; Viking Press, 1983.

Anna Margarita's Will. Concord, N.H.; William B. Ewert, 1984.

The Finishing School. New York; Viking, 1985.

A Southern Family. New York; Morrow, 1987.

Father Melancholy's Daughter. New York; Morrow, 1991.

The Good Husband. New York; Ballantine, 1994.

Evensong. New York; Ballantine, 1999.

Heart: A Personal Journey Through Its Myths and Meanings. New York; Morrow, 2001.

Evenings at Five. New York; Ballantine, 2003.

Queen of the Underworld. New York; Ballantine, 2006.

The Making of a Writer: Journals, 1961-1963. New York; Random House, 2006.

Unfinished Desires. New York; Ballantine, 2009.

The Making of a Writer Volume 2: Journals, 1963-1969. New York; Random House, 2011.

Flora. New York; Bloomsbury, 2013.

Publishing: A Writer's Memoir. New York; Bloomsbury, 2015.

Grief Cottage. New York; Bloomsbury, 2017.

Old Lovegood Girls. New York; Bloomsbury, 2020.

Getting to Know Death: A Meditation. New York; Bloomsbury, 2024.
Cobb, William (Thumbnail).jpg William Cobb Cobb, William
1937-2020

William Cobb was born in Eutaw, Alabama, and raised in Demopolis, Alabama. After completing his undergraduate studies at Livingston State College (now the University of West Alabama), he earned a master’s degree in English at Vanderbilt University and accepted a teaching position at Alabama College (now the University of Montevallo). In 1964, the publication of his award-winning short story, "The Stone Soldier," earned him recognition in the literary community. Cobb continued writing and published several novels, a collection of short stories, and several plays, some of which were produced in New York City. Throughout his career, he received accolades such as a fellowship for creative writing from the National Endowment for the Arts and held the esteemed position of writer-in-residence at the University of Montevallo. He continued writing after retirement until his death in 2020.

William Cobb wrote short stories, novels, and plays frequently set in the South. Many of his works feature a dark humor consistent with the Southern Gothic genre. Themes in his works include racial tension and human dignity. Coming of Age at the Y. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Portals Press, 1984.

The Hermit King. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Portals Press, 1986.

A Walk Through Fire. New York; Morrow, 1992.

Harry Reunited. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 1995.

Somewhere in All This Green. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 1997.

A Spring of Souls. Birmingham; Crane Hill, 1999.

Wings of Morning. Birmingham; Crane Hill, 2001.

The Last Queen of the Gypsies. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2010.

A Time to Reap. Chichester, England; SixFinger, 2013.

Sweet Home: Stories of Alabama. Chichester, England; SixFinger, 2013.

Captain Billy's Troopers: A Writer's Life. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2015.

Siddons, Anne_Rivers (Thumbnail).jpg Anne Rivers Siddons Siddons, Anne Rivers
1936-2019

Anne Rivers Siddons was a native of Atlanta, Georgia. After studying illustration at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University), she immersed herself in various creative roles, including writing and editing for Atlanta magazine and designing layouts for various advertising companies. In 1974, Siddons signed a book contract with Doubleday and subsequently published a collection of essays titled John Chancellor Makes Me Cry. Her writing career shifted to focus on novels with the exception of a travel guide to Atlanta published in 1978. Her debut novel Heartbreak Hotel was adapted into the 1989 film Heart of Dixie, and her horror novel The House Next Door was adapted into a Lifetime Television film in 2006. Siddons divided her time between Charleston, South Carolina, and Brooklin, Maine, before her passing in 2019.

Anne Rivers Siddons was primarily a novelist but started out writing essays and even a travel guide. A recurring trend in her novels is a female southern protagonist grappling with some type of crisis. John Chancellor Makes Me Cry. New York; Doubleday, 1975.

Heartbreak Hotel. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1976.

The House Next Door. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1978.

Go Straight on Peachtree. New York; Dolphin Books, 1978.

Fox's Earth. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1981.

Homeplace. New York; Harper and Row, 1987.

Peachtree Road. New York; Harper and Row, 1988.

King's Oak. New York; HarperCollins, 1990.

Outer Banks. New York; HarperCollins, 1991.

Colony. New York; HarperCollins, 1992.

Hill Towns. New York; HarperCollins, 1993.

Downtown. New York; HarperCollins, 1994.

Fault Lines. New York; HarperCollins, 1995.

Up Island. New York; HarperCollins, 1997.

Low Country. New York; HarperCollins, 1998.

Nora, Nora. New York; HarperCollins, 2000.

Islands. New York; HarperCollins, 2004.

Sweetwater Creek. New York; HarperCollins, 2005.

Off Season. New York; Grand Central Publishing, 2008.

Burnt Mountain. New York; Grand Central Publishing, 2010.

The Girls of August. New York; Grand Central Publishing, 2014.
Hemphill, Paul (Thumbnail).jpg Paul Hemphill Hemphill, Paul
1936-2009

Paul Hemphill was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. Initially aspiring to become a professional baseball player, he later discovered his talent for writing during his time at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University). He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 1959 and pursued a career in journalism, working for a variety newspapers and magazines over his lifetime, such as The Atlanta Journal. He won a Neiman fellowship in 1968 and spent a year at Harvard, where he began writing a book about country music. That book, The Nashville Sound, was published in 1970. Hemphill continued authoring fiction and nonfiction books, including his notable baseball novel, Long Gone. Hemphill's memoir, Leaving Birmingham, reflects on his personal experiences. He continued writing until his death in 2009.

Paul Hemphill wrote fiction and nonfiction on a wide range of topics, including the South, sports, country music, and his personal life. His work was often blunt in its observations about the subject. The Nashville Sound: Bright Lights and Country Music. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1970.

The Good Old Boys. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1974.

Long Gone: a Novel. New York; Viking Press, 1979.

Too Old to Cry. New York; Viking, 1981.

The Sixkiller Chronicles. New York; Macmillan, 1985.

Lovesick Blues: The Life of Hank Williams. New York; Macmillan, 1986.

Me and the Boy. New York; Macmillan, 1986.

King of the Road. Boston; Houghton Mifflin Co., 1989.

Leaving Birmingham: Notes of a Native Son. New York; Viking, 1993.

The Heart of the Game: The Education of a Minor League Ballplayer. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1996.

Wheels: A Season on NASCAR Winston Cup Circuit. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1997.

The Ballad of Little River: A Tale of Race and Restless Youth in the Rural South. New York; Free Press, 2000.

Nobody's Hero. Montgomery, Ala.; River City Press, 2002.

Lost in the Lights: Sports, Dreams, and Life. Tuscaloosa; University Alabama Press, 2003.

A Tiger Walk through History: The Complete Story of Auburn Football from 1892 to the Tuberville Era. Pebble Hill Books, 2008.

Joint Publications:

Mayor: Notes on the Sixties. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1971.

Climbing Jacob's Ladder: A Trial Lawyer's Journey on Behalf of 'the Least of These'. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2002.
Cline, C_Terry_Jr (Thumbnail).png C. Terry Cline Jr. Cline Jr., C. Terry
1935-2013

C. Terry Cline Jr. was originally from Birmingham, Alabama, but was raised in Florida. Despite an early aspiration to pursue writing, Cline faced challenges in finding an audience for his initial novels. During the 1960s and 1970s, he ventured into radio, television, and entrepreneurship, owning multiple businesses in Georgia and Alabama. In 1975, Cline achieved his breakthrough with the publication of his novel Damon, which marked the beginning of a prolific period during which he published a total of nine novels by 1989. In 1979, Cline married fellow author Judith Richards, and the couple resided in Fairhope, Alabama, before his passing in 2013.

C. Terry Cline Jr. wrote horror and suspense novels, a children's play, and a nonfiction book. Cline's novels reflect his interest in psychology and crime. Damon. New York; Putnam, 1975.

Weakfoot. New York; Lothrop, 1975.

Miracle Season. New York; Berkeley, 1976.

Death Knell. New York; Putnam, 1979.

Mindreader. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1981.

Missing Persons. New York; Arbor House, 1981.

Cross Current. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1981.

The Attorney Conspiracy. New York; Arbor House, 1983.

Prey. New York; New American Library, 1985.

Quarry. New York; New American Library, 1987.

Reaper. New York; DI Five, 1989.

The Return of Edgar Cayce. San Francisco, Calif.; MacAdam/Cage, 2011.
Sanchez, Sonia (Thumbnail).jpg Sonia Sanchez Sanchez, Sonia
1934-present

Sonia Sanchez is a native of Birmingham, Alabama. She earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Hunter College before engaging in a year of postgraduate study in poetry at New York University. Her teaching career began in the mid-1960s, and she became known for advancing Black studies within academia. She also began publishing her poetry in literary journals in the mid-1960s, with her first collection of poetry being published in 1969. Over the years, she began writing children’s books, plays, and columns in addition to poetry. She has received numerous awards for her writing, including a Robert Frost Medal and the Langston Hughes Poetry Award. Sanchez has retired from teaching but continues to write while living in Philadelphia.

Sonia Sanchez writes poems, plays, children's books, novels, and columns. She draws inspiration from her experiences as a Black woman in late-20th century America. Her poems frequently use Black English. Home Coming; Poems. Detroit; Broadside Press, 1969.

Liberation Poem. Detroit; Broadside Press, 1970.

Ima Talken Bout the Nation of Islam. New York; Truth Del, 1971.

It's a New Day; Poems for Young Brothas and Sistuhs. Detroit; Broadside Press, 1971.

Love Poems. New York; Third Press, 1973.

The Adventures of Fathead, Smallhead, and Squarehead. New York; Third Press, 1973.

We a BaDDDD People. Detroit; Broadside, 1973.

The Afternoon of Smallhead, Fathead, and Squarehead. New York; Third Press, 1974.

A Blues Book for Blue Black Magical Women. Detroit; Broadside Press, 1974.

I've Been a Woman; New and Selected Poems. California; Black Scholar Press, 1978.

A Sound Investment; Short Stories for Young Readers. Chicago; Third World Press, 1980.

Homegirls and Handgrenades. New York; Thunder Mouth Press, 1984.

Generations, 1969-1985. London; Karnah House, 1986.

Under a Soprano Sky. New Jersey; Africa World Press, 1987.

Shake Down Memory. New Jersey; Africa World Press, 1991.

Wounded in the House of a Friend. Boston; Beacon Press, 1995.

Does Your House Have Lions? Boston; Beacon Press, 1997.

Shake Loose My Skin. Boston; Beacon Press, 1999.

Conversations with Sonia Sanchez. Jackson, Miss.; University Press of Mississippi, 2007.

Homegirls and Handgrenades. New York; White Pine Press, 2007.

I’m Black When I’m Singing, I’m Blue When I Ain’t and Other Plays. Durham, N.C.; Duke University Press, 2010.

Morning Haiku. Boston; Beacon Press, 2010.

Collected Poems. Boston; Beacon Press, 2021.

Joint Publications:

Black and in Brooklyn, Creators and Creations. Brooklyn; Universal Black Writers Press, 1983.

Continuous Fire: A Collection of Poetry. Trenton, N.J.; Africa World Press, 1991.

Like the Singing Coming off the Drums: Love Poems. Boston, Mass.; Beacon Press, 1998.
Barrax, Gerald_W (Thumbnail).jpg Gerald W. Barrax Barrax, Gerald W.
1933-2019

Gerald W. Barrax was born in Atalla, Alabama. He served in the United States Air Force from 1953-1957. While serving in South Carolina, Barrax began studying poetry in his free time. He enrolled at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh to study English in 1959, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in 1963. He also earned a master’s degree in 1969 from the University of Pittsburgh. Barrax went on to have a successful teaching career as an English instructor at North Carolina Central University and later as a faculty member at North Carolina State University. He published five books of poetry during his lifetime and earned awards from the city of Raleigh, North Carolina, and the state of North Carolina for his contributions to fine arts.

Gerald W. Barrax was a poet who wrote about the African American experience, love, death, religion, and more. His work shows his deep introspection and commitment to the craft of poetry. Another Kind of Rain. Pittsburgh; University of Pittsburgh Press, 1970.

An Audience of One. Athens; University of Georgia Press, 1980.

The Deaths of Animals and Lesser Gods. Kentucky; University of Kentucky, Lexington, 1984.

Leaning Against the Sun: Poems. Fayetteville; University of Arkansas Press, 1992.

From a Person Sitting in Darkness: New and Selected Poems. Baton Rouge; Louisiana State University Press, 1998.

Talese, Gay (Thumbnail).jpg Gay Talese Talese, Gay
1932-present

Gay Talese is a native of Ocean City, New Jersey. He developed an early passion for writing and began contributing sports stories to the Ocean City Sentinel-Ledger during high school. Talese earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Alabama in 1953 and then worked as a copyboy for The New York Times before serving in the United States Army. In 1956, Talese returned to the Times as a reporter, later doing freelance work for Esquire magazine as well. In 1961, Talese began publishing nonfiction books, many of which became bestsellers. Talese has also published a memoir, A Writer’s Life, and currently divides his time between Ocean City and New York City.

Gay Talese worked as a journalist in the 1960s and has written several books. His nonfiction tends to be written from a personal perspective and emphasizes scene, character, and detail. New York: A Serendipiter's Journey. New York; Harper, 1961.

The Bridge. New York; Harper, 1964.

The Overreachers. New York; Harper, 1965.

The Kingdom and the Power. New York; World Publishing Company, 1969.

Fame and Obscurity. New York; World Publishing, 1970.

Honor Thy Father. New York; World Publishing, 1971.

Thy Neighbor's Wife. New York; Doubleday, 1980.

Unto the Sons. New York; Knopf, 1992.

The Gay Talese Reader: Portraits and Encounters. New York; Bloomsbury, 2003.

A Writer's Life. New York; Random House, 2006.

The Silent Season of a Hero: The Sports Writing of Gay Talese. New York; Bloomsbury, 2010.

The Voyeur's Motel. New York; Grove Press, 2016.

Bartleby and Me: Reflections of an Old Scrivener. New York; HarperCollins, 2023.

Joint Publications:

Writing Creative Nonfiction: The Literature of Reality. New York; HarperCollins, 1995.
Grau, Shirley_Ann (Thumbnail).jpg Shirley Ann Grau Grau, Shirley Ann
1929-2020

Shirley Ann Grau was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, but spent part of her childhood in Montgomery, Alabama. She pursued higher education and earned a bachelor’s degree in English from Tulane University before beginning to publish her stories in 1951. Grau's literary accomplishments include publishing her first collection of stories, The Black Prince, in 1955, and her first novel, The Hard Blue Sky, in 1958. Notably, she received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1965 for her novel The Keepers of the House, set in rural Alabama. Grau has been recognized for her literary contributions with honorary doctorates as well as a 2018 induction into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame. She died of stroke complications in 2020.

Shirley Ann Grau wrote short stories and novels that were typically set in the South. Themes in her work include the cultural diversity of the South and racism. The Black Prince and Other Stories. New York; Knopf, 1955.

The Hard Blue Sky. New York; Knopf, 1958.

The House on Coliseum Street. New York; Knopf, 1961.

The Keepers of the House. New York; Knopf, 1964.

The Condor Passes. New York; Knopf, 1971.

The Wind Shifting West. New York; Knopf, 1973.

Evidence of Love. New York; Random House, 1977.

Nine Women. New York; Knopf, 1985.

Roadwalkers. New York; Knopf, 1994.

Selected Stories. Baton Rouge, La.; Louisiana State University Press, 2006.
Butterworth, W.E. (Thumbnail).png William E. Butterworth Butterworth, William E.
1929-2019

William E. Butterworth, also known as W.E.B. Griffin, was a prolific author born in New Jersey and raised in Boston, Philadelphia, and Manhattan. He is associated with Alabama due to his time stationed at Fort Rucker in Coffee and Dale Counties. Enlisting in the United States Army at sixteen, he received training in counterintelligence and served in the Korean War as a combat correspondent. Following his discharge, Butterworth began writing novels while working as a civilian information officer at Ft. Rucker, Alabama. His first novel, Comfort Me with Love, was published in 1959, and a couple years after that he resigned from his job and pursued writing full-time, frequently using pseudonyms for his publications. Butterworth died in Alabama in 2019.

William E. Butterworth was a prolific novelist for adults and young readers. Many of his works are military or detective novels. He drew inspiration from his experiences in the US Army, incorporating historical and current events into his narratives. Comfort Me With Love. New York; New American Library, 1959.

Hot Seat. New York; New American Library. 1959.

No French Leave. New York; Fawcett, 1960.

The Love-Go-Round. New York; Berkeley Publishing Co., 1960.

Where We Go From Here. New York; New American Library, 1961.

Heartbreak Ridge. New York; Berkeley Publishing Co., 1962.

Hell on Wheels. New York; Berkeley Publishing Co., 1962.

Return to Daytona. New York; Norton, 1962.

The Court-Martial. New York; New American Library, 1962.

The Girl in the Black Bikini. New York; Berkeley Publishing Co., 1962.

The Loved and the Lost. Derby, Conn.; Monarch, 1962.

Once More With Passion. Derby, Conn.; Monarch, 1964.

The Wonders of Astronomy. New York; Putnam, 1964.

Article 92: Murder-Rape. New York; Fawcett, 1965.

Doing What Comes Naturally. Derby, Conn.; Monarch, 1965.

Flat Out. New York; Norton, 1965.

L’il Wildcat. Cleveland; World Publishing, 1965.

The Wonders of Rockets and Missiles. New York; Putnam, 1965.

Warrior’s Way. New York; Fawcett, 1965.

Fast Green Car. New York; Norton, 1966.

Make War in Madness. New York; Fawcett, 1966.

Soldiers on Horseback: The Story of the United States Cavalry. New York; Norton, 1966.

Stock Car Racer. New York; Norton, 1966.

Tiger Rookie. Cleveland; World Publishing, 1966.

Air Evac. New York; Norton, 1967.

Bryan’s Dog. Cleveland; World Publishing, 1967.

Fastest Funny Car. New York; Four Winds Press, 1967.

Helicopter Pilot. New York; Norton, 1967.

Hunger for Racing. New York; Putnam, 1967.

Road Racer. New York; Norton, 1967.

The Image Makers. Melbourne; Scripts Publishing, 1967.

Grand Prix Racing. New York; Four Winds Press, 1968.

Maverick on the Mound. Cleveland; World Publishing, 1968.

Orders to Vietnam. Boston; Little, Brown, 1968.

Redline 7100. New York; Norton, 1968.

The Green Ghost. New York; Norton, 1968.

Grand Prix Driver. New York; Norton, 1969.

Racing to Glory. New York; Putnam, 1969.

Stop and Search. Boston; Little, Brown, 1969.

The Wheel of a Fast Car. New York; Norton, 1969.

Up to the Quarterdeck. New York; Four Winds Press, 1969.

Fast and Smart. New York; Norton, 1970.

Marty and the Micromidgets. New York; Norton, 1970.

Stars and Planets. New York; Putnam, 1970.

Steve Bellamy. Boston; Little, Brown, 1970.

Susan and Her Classic Convertible. New York; Four Winds Press, 1970.

Yankee Boy. Cleveland; World Publishing, 1970.

Crazy to Race. New York; Grossett, 1971.

Drag Race Driver. New York; Putnam, 1971.

Flying Army; the Modern Air Arm of the U.S. Army. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1971.

Moving West on 122. Boston; Little, Brown, 1971.

My Father’s Quite a Guy. Boston; Little, Brown, 1971.

Racing Mechanic. New York; Grossett, 1971.

Return to Racing. New York; Grossett, 1971.

The High Wind: The Story of NASCAR Racing. New York; Grossett, 1971.

The Sex Traveler. Los Angeles; New English Library, 1971.

The Twelve-Cylinder Screamer. New York; Putnam, 1971.

Wheels and Pistons: The Story of the Automobile. New York; Four Winds Press, 1971.

A Long Ride on a Cycle. New York; Putnam, 1972.

Dateline: Talladega. New York; Grossett, 1972.

Skyjacked. New York; Scholastic Book Service, 1972.

Team Racer. New York; Grossett, 1972.

The Narc. New York; Four Winds Press, 1972.

The Race Driver. New York; Scholastic Book Service, 1972.

Hot Wire. New York; Harvey House, 1973.

Race Car Team. New York; Grossett, 1973.

Yankee Driver. New York; Grossett, 1973.

Dave White and the Electric Wonder Car. New York; Four Winds Press, 1974.

Stop, Thief! New York; Scholastic Book Service, 1974.

Black Gold: The Story of Oil. New York; Four Winds Press, 1975.

Tires and Other Things: Some Heroes of Automotive Evolution. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1975.

Mighty Minicycles. New York; Harvey House, 1976.

The Roper Brothers and Their Magnificent Steam Automobile. New York; Four Winds Press, 1976.

An Album of Automobile Racing. New York; Watts, 1977.

Careers in the Armed Services. New York; Walker, 1977

Christina's Passion. New York; Playboy Press, 1977.

Hifi — From Edison's Phonograph to Quadraphonic Sound. New York; Scholastic Book Service, 1977.

Next Stop, Earth. New York; Walker, 1978.

The Air Freight Mystery. New York; Four Winds Press, 1978.

The Tank Driver. New York; Scholastic Book Service, 1978.

The Hotel Mystery. New York; Scholastic Press, 1979.

The Wrecker Driver. New York; Scholastic Press, 1979.

LeRoy and the Old Man. New York; Four Winds Press, 1980.

Slaughter by Auto. New York; Four Winds Press, 1980.

The Wiltons. New York; New American Library, 1980.

Under the Influence. New York; Scholastic Press, 1980.

Flunking Out. New York; Four Winds Press, 1981.

A Member of the Family. New York; Four Winds Press, 1982.

The Lieutenants. New York; Jove, 1982.

The Captains. New York; Jove, 1982.

Moose, the Thing, and Me. Boston; Houghton, 1982.

The Selkirks. New York; New American Library, 1982.

The Colonels. New York; Jove, 1983.

The Majors. New York; Jove, 1983.

Wild Harvest. New York; New American Library, 1983.

The Berets. New York; Jove, 1984.

The Deep Kill. New York; Jove-Putnam, 1984.

Wild Heritage. New York; New American Library, 1984.

The Last Heroes. New York; Pocket Books, 1985.

Semper Fi. New York; Jove, 1986.

The Generals. New York; Jove, 1986.

The Secret Warriors. New York; Pocket Books, 1986.

The Soldier Spies. New York; Pocket Books, 1986.

Call To Arms. New York; Jove, 1987.

The Fighting Agents. New York; Pocket Books, 1987.

The New Breed. New York; Putnam, 1987.

Men in Blue. New York; Jove, 1988.

The Aviators. New York; Putnam, 1988.

Counterattack. New York; Putnam, 1990.

Battleground. New York; Putnam, 1991.

Special Operations. New York; Jove, 1991.

The Victim. New York; Jove, 1991.

Line of Fire. New York; Putnam, 1992.

The Witness. New York; Jove, 1992.

Close Combat. New York; Putnam, 1993.

Honor Bound. New York; Putnam, 1993.

The Assassin. New York; Jove, 1993.

The Murderers. New York; Putnam, 1995.

Behind the Lines. New York; Putnam, 1995.

Blood and Honor. New York; Putnam, 1996.

The Investigators. New York; Putnam, 1998.

In Danger’s Path. New York; Putnam, 1999.

Secret Honor. New York; Putnam, 2000.

Special Ops. New York; Putnam, 2001.

Under Fire. New York; Putnam, 2002.

Final Justice. New York; Putnam, 2003.

Retreat, Hell! New York; Putnam, 2004.

By Order of the President. New York; Putnam, 2005.

The Hostage. New York; Putnam, 2006.

The Saboteurs. New York; Putnam, 2006.

The Double Agents. New York; Putnam, 2007.

The Hunters. New York; Putnam, 2007.

Death and Honor. New York; Putnam, 2008.

The Shooters. New York; Putnam, 2008.

Black Ops. New York; Putnam, 2009.

The Traffickers. New York; Putnam, 2009.

The Honor of Spies. New York; Putnam, 2010.

The Outlaws. New York; Putnam, 2010.

The Vigilantes. New York; Putnam, 2010.

Covert Warriors. New York; Putnam, 2011.

Victory and Honor. New York; Putnam, 2011.

Empire and Honor. New York; Putnam, 2012.

The Spymasters. New York; Putnam, 2012.

Hazardous Duty. New York; Putnam, 2013.

The Last Witness. New York; Putnam, 2013.

The Assassination Option. New York; Putnam, 2014.

Top Secret. New York; Putnam, 2014.

Deadly Assets. New York; Putnam, 2015.

The Hunting Trip. New York; Putnam, 2015.

Broken Trust. New York; Putnam, 2016.

Curtain of Death. New York; Putnam, 2016.

Death at Nuremberg. New York; Putnam, 2017.

The Enemy of My Enemy. New York; Putnam, 2018.

Joint Publications:

M*A*S*H Goes to New Orleans. New York; Pocket Books, 1974.

M*A*S*H Goes to Paris. New York; Pocket Books, 1974.

M*A*S*H Goes to London. New York; Pocket Books, 1975.

M*A*S*H Goes to Morocco. New York; Pocket Books, 1975.

M*A*S*H Goes to Hollywood. New York; Pocket Books, 1976.

M*A*S*H Goes to Las Vegas. New York; Pocket Books, 1976.

M*A*S*H Goes to Miami. New York; Pocket Books, 1976.

M*A*S*H Goes to San Francisco. New York; Pocket Books. 1976.

M*A*S*H Goes to Vienna. New York; Pocket Books, 1976.

M*A*S*H Goes to Montreal. New York; Pocket Books, 1977.

M*A*S*H Goes to Moscow. New York; Pocket Books, 1977.

M*A*S*H Goes to Texas. New York; Pocket Books, 1977.

Deal, Babs_H (Thumbnail).jpg Babs H. Deal Deal, Babs H.
1929-2004

Babs Deal was a native of Scottsboro, Alabama. She was a substitute teacher in Scottsboro before she joined the United States Army as a clerk-typist in Washington, D.C. Later, she pursued her studies at the University of Alabama, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in 1952 under the guidance of Hudson Strode. During this time, she met and married writer Borden Deal. Babs Deal's writing career blossomed with the publication of her first novel, Acres of Afternoon, in 1959, followed by numerous novels and short stories that garnered attention. Despite personal changes and a divorce from Borden Deal, she continued to write and eventually settled in Gulf Shores, Alabama, until her passing in 2004.

Babs H. Deal wrote short stories and novels set in small southern towns. Themes of her works include mystery, secrets, and relationships. Acres of Afternoon. New York; McKay, 1959.

It's Always Three O'Clock. New York; McKay, 1961.

Night Story. New York; Doubleday, 1962.

The Grail. New York; McKay, 1964.

Fancy's Knell. New York; Doubleday, 1966.

The Walls Came Tumbling Down. New York; Doubleday, 1968.

Summer Games. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1969.

High Lonesome World. New York; Doubleday, 1969.

The Crystal Mouse. New York; Doubleday, 1973.

The Reason for Roses. New York; Doubleday, 1974.

Waiting to Hear from William. New York; Doubleday, 1975.

Goodnight Ladies. New York; Doubleday, 1978.

Friendships, Secrets and Lies. New York; Fawcett, 1979.
King, Martin_Luther_Jr (Thumbnail).jpg Martin Luther King Jr. King Jr., Martin Luther
1929-1968

Martin Luther King Jr. was born in Atlanta, Georgia. He earned his bachelor’s degree in sociology from Morehouse College in 1948 before earning a bachelor’s degree from Crozer Theological Seminary in 1951 and a doctorate in theology from Boston University in 1955. King moved to Montgomery, Alabama, and became the pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church as well as president of the Montgomery Improvement Association. King played a pivotal role in organizing the Montgomery Bus Boycott and published Stride Toward Freedom about the boycott afterwards. He co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and led nonviolent campaigns against segregation. One of his campaigns led to his arrest in Birmingham, Alabama, and he wrote “Letter From Birmingham Jail” as a response to those against the campaign. King's powerful speeches, including his iconic "I Have a Dream" address, and his civil rights activism led to him being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. King was shot and killed after he delivered his “I’ve Been To the Mountaintop” speech in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968.

Martin Luther King Jr. was a civil rights activist and pastor who wrote sermons, essays, and speeches that were highly influential during the civil rights movement. Major themes in his works include racial equality, social justice, and change. Stride Toward Freedom; the Montgomery Story. New York; Harper, 1958.

Pilgrimage to Nonviolence. Chicago; Fellowship of Reconciliation, 1960.

Letter from Birmingham City Jail. Philadelphia; American Friends Service Committee, 1963.

Strength to Love. New York; Harper, 1964.

Why We Can Wait. New York; Harper, 1964.

Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? New York; Harper, 1967.

Measure of a Man. Christian Education Press, 1959; memorial edition, Pilgrim Press, 1968.

I've Been to the Mountaintop. San Francisco; Harper, 1994.
Fellows, Alice.jpg Alice Fellows Fellows, Alice
1928-2016

Alice Fellows was a Tuscaloosa native. She obtained her bachelor's degree from the University of Alabama in 1948, where she studied fiction writing under Hudson Strode. She began writing a novel, Laurel, in Strode’s class and completed it with the support of a fellowship from the Eugene F. Saxton Memorial Fellowship Trust. Laurel was published in 1950 and adapted for television in 1951. After her first publication, Fellows pursued graduate studies in history at Columbia University and later finished her master’s degree in Bloomington, Indiana. In 1977, Fellows began a successful career as an editor at Simon & Schuster publishing company before transitioning to travel writing in the 1990s. She passed away in 2016.

Alice Fellows wrote travel books and a novel. Her novel Laurel is set in a southern city and explores human ambition and decision making.

Laurel, a Novel. New York; Harcourt, 1950.

Frommer's Europe. New York; MacMillan, 1997.

Hong Kong. London; Berlitz Publishing, 2001.

Joint Publications:

Scotland. London; Berlitz Publishing, 2002.

Dublin. London; Berlitz Publishing, 2003.

Scotland: Pocket Guide. London; Insight Guides, 2016.
Ford, Jesse_Hill (Thumbnail).jpeg Jesse Hill Ford Ford, Jesse Hill
1928-1996

Jesse Hill Ford was born in Troy, Alabama, but spent time in Jasper, Alabama, and Nashville, Tennessee during his childhood. After graduating from Vanderbilt University in 1951, Ford entered the United States Navy. Ford returned to higher education afterwards, obtaining his master’s degree from the University of Florida in 1955. After briefly working in public relations, Ford moved to Humbolt, Tennessee, and began writing full-time. Ford sold his first short story to Atlanta Monthly in 1959 and published his first novel in 1961. In 1965, Ford published the novel The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones, which is about the murder of a local man. He continued writing short stories and novels. After The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones was adapted into a movie in 1970, Ford and his family experienced vandalism and harassment. Late in 1970, Ford shot and killed a Black man that was trespassing on his property. Ford was acquitted of murder charges, but his life and career were damaged. He continued writing editorials and screenplays before committing suicide in 1996.

Jesse Hill Ford wrote short stories, novels, and screenplays that were frequently set in the South. Themes in his works include race, violence, and honor. Mountains of Gilead. Boston; Little, Brown, 1961.

The Conversion of Buster Drumwright. Nashville; Vanderbilt University Press, 1964.

Fishes, Birds and Sons of Men. Boston; Little, Brown, 1967.

The Feast of St. Barnabas. Boston; Little, Brown, 1969.

The Jail. New York; Glen Ober Associates, 1970.

The Raider. Boston; Little, Brown, 1975.

Mr. Potter and His Bank: The Life of Edward Potter, Jr. Nashville, Tenn.; Commerce Union Bank, 1977.

The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones. Boston; Little, Brown, 1965; rpt. Athens; University of Georgia Press, 1993.
McAfee, Thomas (Thumbnail).jpg Thomas McAfee McAfee, Thomas
1928-1982

Thomas McAfee was a native of Haleyville, Alabama. His early exposure to a vast library and his interest in writing led him to pursue a bachelor's and a master's degree in English from the University of Missouri at Columbia. After serving in the United States Army for two years, he joined the English department at the University of Missouri at Columbia and remained there as a professor for nearly three decades. McAfee's literary journey encompassed the publication of poems and short stories in reputable literary magazines, culminating in his first book, Poems and Stories, in 1960. McAfee continued to write short stories, poems, and even a novel, and he was awarded a writing fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts in 1976. He passed away in 1982 due to lung cancer.

Thomas McAfee wrote short stories, realistic poems, and a novel about an unsophisticated Alabama boy. Themes in his works include rural and small-town Alabama, violence, and travel. Poems and Stories. Columbia; University of Missouri, 1960.

I'll Be Home Late Tonight: Poems. Columbia; University of Missouri, 1967.

Rover Youngblood: An American Fable. New York; R. W. Baron, 1969.

The Body & the Body's Guest: New and Selected Poems. Kansas City; BkMk, 1975.

The Tempo Changes, the Lights Go Up, the Partners Change. Columbia; Singing Wind Publications, 1978.

Whatever Isn't Glory: Stories. St. Louis; Singing Wind Press, K. M. Gentile Pub., 1979.
George, Anne (Thumbnail).jpg Anne George George, Anne
1927-2001

Anne George was born in Montgomery, Alabama, and spent her early years under the care of her grandparents. She faced challenges when the family relocated to a farm in Lowndes County, Alabama, including a daily train commute and being placed in a higher grade level at a young age. George pursued higher education, earning a bachelor’s degree in English and Spanish from Samford University before teaching English in Birmingham junior high and high schools for over twenty years. She returned to higher education and obtained a master’s degree in English and education from the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 1971. George co-founded Druid Press in 1982 and sold it after ten years when she decided to write full-time. She ultimately gained recognition for her Southern Sisters mystery series, which comprises of seven published books.

Anne George wrote poetry, short stories, and novels. Her works feature detailed settings and authentic characters. Her series of mystery novels Southern Sisters is set in Birmingham.

Murder on a Girls' Night Out. New York; Avon, 1966.

Dreamer, Dreaming Me. Alabama; Druid Press, 1980.

Wild Goose Chase. Alabama; Druid Press, 1982.

Spraying Under the Bed for Wolves. Alabama; Druid Press, 1985.

Some of It Is True. Carollton, Ga.; Curbow Publications, 1993.

Murder on a Bad Hair Day. New York; Avon, 1996.

Murder Makes Waves. New York; Avon, 1997.

Murder Runs in the Family. New York; Avon, 1997.

Murder Gets a Life. New York; Avon, 1998.

This One and Magic Life: A Novel of a Southern Family. New York; Avon, 1999.

Murder Shoots the Bull. New York; Morrow, 1999.

Murder Carries the Torch. New York; Morrow, 2000.

The Map that Lies Between Us. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 2000.

Murder Boogies with Elvis. New York; Morrow, 2001.
Searcy, Margaret_Zehmer (Thumbnail).jpg Margaret Zehmer Searcy Searcy, Margaret Zehmer
1926-2017

Margaret Zehmer Searcy was a native of Raleigh, North Carolina. She completed her undergraduate studies at Duke University in 1946 before becoming the first student to receive a Master of Arts degree in anthropology from the University of Alabama in 1954. Searcy went on teach anthropology at the University of Alabama for over two decades. Alongside her academic career, Searcy authored a notable collection of children's and young adult books, earning recognition and awards such as the Alabama Authors Award in 1980. She passed away in 2017.

Margaret Zehmer Searcy wrote children's books and young adult novels. Her works frequently feature Southeastern Native Americans and their culture and mythology. Ikwa of the Temple Mounds. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1974.

Alli Gator Gets a Bump on His Nose. Alabama; Portals Press, 1978.

Tiny Bat and the Ball Game. Alabama; Portals Press, 1978.

The Race of Flitty Hummingbird and Flappy Crane; an Indian Legend. Alabama; Portals Press, 1980.

The Charm of the Bear Claw Necklace; a Story of Stone-Age Southeastern Indians. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1981.

Wolf Dog of the Woodland Indians. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1982.
Lee, Harper (Thumbnail).jpg Harper Lee Lee, Harper
1926-2016

Harper Lee was a native of Monroeville, Alabama. She grew up alongside Truman Capote, and their close bond influenced her later writing. Although Lee attended Huntingdon College and the University of Alabama's law school, she left both institutions before obtaining a degree. She relocated to New York, working as an airline reservation clerk while pursuing her writing career. With financial support from friends, Lee dedicated herself fully to writing and produced her iconic novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, which drew inspiration from her hometown and people in her life. The book earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1961 and was adapted into a film in 1962. Lee also assisted Capote in researching his book In Cold Blood. While Lee published essays in the 1960s, it wasn't until 2015 that an early draft of her first novel, titled Go Set a Watchman, was released. Harper Lee passed away in 2016.

Harper Lee is predominantly remembered for her novel To Kill a Mockingbird. It explores the dimensions of prejudice and love from a young girl's perspective while insightfully describing small-town Alabama life.

To Kill a Mockingbird. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1960.

Go Set a Watchman. New York; Harper, 2015.
Sanguinetti, Elise (Thumbnail).jpg Elise Sanguinetti Sanguinetti, Elise
1926-2014

Elise Sanguinetti was a native of Anniston, Alabama. She completed her undergraduate studies at the University of Alabama under the mentorship of Hudson Strode and collaborated with Harper Lee on The Rammer-Jammer, the university's humor magazine. After graduation, she worked as a reporter for The Anniston Star for four years before deciding to move to Pittsburgh and pursue fiction writing. She began publishing short stories in prominent literary journals in 1960 and also wrote several novels over the years. She died in 2014.

Elise Sanguinetti wrote feature stories, short stories, and novels. In her novels, she immersed readers in southern settings while capturing the intricate shifts within southern society in the 1950s and 1960s. The Last of the Whitfields. New York; McGraw-Hill, 1962.

The New Girl. New York; McGraw-Hill, 1964.

The Dowager. New York; Scribner, 1968.

McBee's Station. New York; Holt, 1971.
Bell, Robert_E.jpg Robert Bell Bell, Robert
1926-1999

Robert Bell was born and raised in Tarrant City, Alabama. His passion for literature and writing developed during his high school years, leading him to pursue an English major at Birmingham-Southern College. After serving in the US Army, Bell resumed his studies, earning a bachelor’s degree in English from BSC in 1950. He continued his education at Harvard University, where he obtained a master’s degree in English in 1952. Bell worked at the Mobile Public Library and, later, the Fort Worth Public Library while working on a novel set in Fairhope, Alabama. His novel, titled The Butterfly Tree, was published in 1959. Bell went on to hold positions as a librarian or book shop owner in the cities of San Francisco, New Orleans, and Mobile. He earned a master’s degree in library science from Louisiana State University in 1967, and he earned a doctorate in library science from the University of California Berkeley in 1974. In 1976, Bell accepted a librarian position at the University of California Davis, where he wrote three reference works on classical mythology. In his retirement, he returned to writing fiction, which was never published. His correspondence with Fairhope, Alabama, resident Mary Lois Timbes was published in 2001, two years after Bell’s death, as Meet Me at the Butterfly Tree.

Robert Bell wrote reference books on classical mythology and a coming-of-age novel set in Alabama. His novel is known for its descriptions of setting and its unique characters. A Bibliography of Mobile, Alabama. Alabama; University of Alabama, 1956.

The Butterfly Tree: A Novel. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1959.

A Dictionary of Classical Mythology: Symbols, Attributes and Association in Classical Myth. California; ABC-CLIO, 1982.

Place Names in Classical Mythology: Greece. California; ABC-CLIO, 1989.

Women of Classical Mythology: A Biographical Guide. California; ABC-CLIO, 1991.
Packer, Nancy_Huddleston (Thumbnail).jpg Nancy Huddleston Packer Packer, Nancy Huddleston
1925-present

Nancy Huddleston Packer was born and raised in Washington, D.C., but spent summers in Birmingham, Alabama. She earned a bachelor’s degree from Birmingham-Southern College in 1945 before obtaining her master’s degree from the University of Chicago in 1947. Packer then embarked on a multifaceted career that included teaching for institutions like Birmingham-Southern College and Stanford University as well as writing short stories and nonfiction. Packer's literary contributions include three short story collections, a memoir, and textbooks on creative writing. She currently resides in Palo Alto, California.

Nancy Huddleston Packer writes short stories and nonfiction. Many of her short stories have female narrators and include themes like family. Small Moments and Other Stories. Illinois; University of Illinois Press, 1976.

In My Father's House; Tales of an Unconformable Man. California; J. Daniel, 1988.

The Women Who Walk. Louisiana; Louisiana State University Press, 1989.

Jealous-Hearted Me and Other Stories. California; J. Daniel, 1997.

Old Ladies. California; Daniel & Daniel, 2012.

Joint Publications:

The Short Story; an Introduction. New York; McGraw-Hill, 1976.

Writing Worth Reading; a Practical Guide. New York; St. Martin's, 1986.

Writing Worth Reading; The Critical Response. Boston; Bedford, 1997.
Jones, Madison (Thumbnail).jpg Madison Jones Jones, Madison
1925-2012

Madison Jones was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and had a formative upbringing listening to Bible stories, tales of the Civil War, and folk tales while living with his maternal grandparents in Belle Meade. Summers spent working on his father's farm further shaped his experiences. He was drafted and served in the United States Army Corps of Military Police before earning a bachelor’s degree from Vanderbilt University in 1949. He went on to earn his master’s degree from the University of Florida in 1951 and then taught at Miami University of Ohio. His debut novel, The Innocent, was published in 1957 and marked the beginning of his career as a novelist. Jones briefly taught at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville before joining Auburn University's English department until his retirement in 1987. Throughout his career, Jones received notable fellowships, including the Rockefeller Foundation fellowship in 1968 and the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1973. The 1970 film I Walk the Line is an adaptation of one of Jones’s novels, An Exile. Jones continued to live and write in Auburn, Alabama, until his death in 2012.

Madison Jones was a novelist inspired by the Agrarian tradition in southern literature and Calvinism. Many of his novels explore themes of morality, man's depravity, and redemption. The Innocent. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1957.

History of the Tennessee State Dental Association. Nashville; Tennessee Dental Association, 1958.

Forest of the Night. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1960.

A Buried Land. New York; Viking, 1963.

An Exile. New York; Viking, 1967.

A Cry of Absence. New York; Crown, 1971.

Passage Through Gehenna. Louisiana; Louisiana State University Press, 1978.

Season of the Strangler. New York; Doubleday, 1982.

Last Things. Louisiana; Louisiana State University Press, 1989.

To the Winds: A Novel. Atlanta; Longstreet Press, 1996.

Nashville, 1864: The Dying of the Light: A Novel. Nashville; J.S. Sanders, 1997.

Herod’s Wife: A Novel. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2003.

The Adventures of Douglas Bragg: A Novel. Knoxville; University of Tennessee Press, 2008.

Essential Oils For Weight Loss: Essential Oils Recipes To Shed Fat. Madison Jones, 2014.

The Productivity Planner: The Planner For Every Facet of Your Life. Madison Jones, 2021.

The Fruits of My Mind : Faith-Based Poetry. Madison Jones, 2022.

A Garden For a Heart: A Collection of Poems. Madison Jones, 2023.
Carter, Forrest (Thumbnail).jpg Forrest Carter Carter, Forrest
1925-1979

Forrest Carter, originally known as Asa Earl Carter, was born in Alabama. He served in the US Navy during World War II and later worked as a radio announcer. Carter became involved in segregationist movements by publishing a segregationist magazine, starting a chapter of the Ku Klux Klan, and working as a speechwriter for George C. Wallace. In the 1970s, he re-emerged under the pseudonym Bedford Forrest Carter and achieved literary success with novels like The Rebel Outlaw, Josey Wales and The Education of Little Tree. Despite his literary accomplishments, Carter's past and associations continued to generate public scrutiny. He passed away in Texas in 1979.

Forrest Carter was a novelist and a speech writer. His speeches expressed white supremacist views such as support for segregation. His fiction was largely adventure novels set in the West, with the exception of one autobiographical account of a Cherokee boy that turned out to be a hoax. Rebel Outlaw; Josie Wales. S.l.; Whipperwill Publishers, 1973.

The Education of Little Tree. New York; Delacorte Press, 1976.

The Vengeance Trail of Josey Wales. New York; Delacorte Press, 1976.

Watch For Me On the Mountain. New York; Delacorte Press, 1978.

Cry Geronimo. New York; Dell/Eleanor Friede Book, 1980.
Francis, H_E (Thumbnail).jpg H.E. Francis Francis, H.E.
1924-2024

H.E. Francis was a native of Bristol, Rhode Island. He served in the United States Air Force during World War II and then pursued higher education with the help of the G.I. Bill, obtaining a bachelor’s degree in English and Spanish from the University of Wisconsin and a master’s degree from Brown University. Francis taught at several esteemed institutions before joining the English department at the University of Alabama in Huntsville in 1966. Recognized for his proficiency in both writing and translation, Francis wrote novels and short story collections in addition to translating works by Spanish-language authors. His contributions to literature were acknowledged through the establishment of an annual short story competition in his name. He died in Huntsville in 2024.

H.E. Francis wrote novels and short stories in both English and Spanish. His works explore the human heart, isolation, obsession, and dignity. Five Miles to December. Dallas, Texas; Southern Methodist University, 1960.

Dos Cuentos. Argentina; Burnichon, 1965.

As Fish, As Birds, As Grass. Argentina; Burnichon,1966.

Toda la Gente Que Nunca Tuve. Argentina; Burnichon, 1966.

The Itinerary of Beggars. Iowa; University of Iowa Press, 1973.

Had, a Novella. Alabama; B. Minshew, 1973.

History of a Man in Despair. Huntsville, Ala; sn, 1976.

Naming Things; Stories. Illinois; University of Illinois Press, 1980.

A Disturbance of Gulls and Other Stories. New York; G. Braziller, 1983.

Healing of the Body and Other Stories. Georgia; F.C. Beil, 1992.

Goya, Are You with Me Now? Georgia; F.C. Beil, 1999.

The Sudden Trees, and other Stories. Georgia; F.C. Beil, 1999.

The Invisible Country. Savannah, Ga.; F.C. Beil, 2003.

I'll Never Leave You: Stories. Kansas City, Mo.; BkMk Press, 2004.
Heath_WL_thumbnail.jpg W.L. Heath Heath, W.L.
1924-2007

W.L. Heath was born in Lake Village, Arkansas, but raised in Scottsboro, Alabama, by relatives following the loss of his mother. After attending the Baylor Military Academy and briefly serving as a combat pilot during World War II, Heath graduated with a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Virginia. Heath had a successful career as a writer, producing novels for adults from the 1950s until the 1970s and also venturing into children's literature in the 1970s. After retiring in 1988, Heath resided in Guntersville, Alabama, until his passing in 2007.

W.L. Heath wrote novels, short stories, and children's books. He is remembered as one of the founders of southern noir, which is a genre featuring normal small-town southerners getting caught up in violent situations. Violent Saturday. New York; Harper & Brothers, 1955. Rpt. Berkeley, Calif.; Creative Arts, 1985.

Ill Wind. New York; Harper, 1957. Rpt. Berkeley, Calif.; Creative Arts, 1985.

Temptation in a Southern Town. New York; Hillman Periodicals, 1959.

The Good Old Boys. New York; McCall Pub. Co, 1971.

Most Valuable Player. New York; Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973.

Max the Great. New York; Crane Russak, 1977.

The Earthquake Man. New York; Beaufort Books, 1980.

Sad Clown. Sl; sn, 1956.

Temptation in a Southern Town. New York; Hillman Periodicals, 1959.
Lincoln, Eric_C (Thumbnail).jpg C. Eric Lincoln Lincoln, C. Eric
1924-2000

C. Eric Lincoln was born and raised in Athens, Alabama. He took night classes at the University of Chicago before serving in the United States Navy during World War II. He went on to earn degrees in sociology, philosophy, divinity, and social ethics from institutions such as LeMoyne College, Fisk University, and Boston University. Lincoln held faculty positions at various universities, including Duke University, from which he retired in 1993, and was renowned for his scholarly works on religion and the African American community. In addition to his academic pursuits, he authored a novel, The Avenue: Clayton City, and a collection of poems, This Road Since Freedom. Despite facing health issues in his later years, Lincoln continued to contribute to the discourse on race in American culture through his thought-provoking essays, with his final publication being Coming Through the Fire in 1996. Lincoln passed away in 2000.

C. Eric Lincoln wrote nonfiction and fiction. His nonfiction centers on the Black American experience and focuses on themes of religion, racism, and civil rights. His novel is based on his own experiences growing up amidst racial segregation. The Black Muslims in America. Boston; Beacon, 1961.

My Face is Black. Boston; Beacon, 1964.

The Negro Pilgrimage in America; the Coming of Age of Black Americans. New York; Bantam, 1967.

Is Anybody Listening? New York; Seabury, 1968.

The Black Americans. New York; Bantam, 1969.

Martin Luther King, Jr.; a Profile. New York; Hill & Wang, 1970.

The Black Church Since Frazier. New York; Schocken, 1974.

The Black Experience in Religion. New York; Anchor, 1974.

Beyond the Conventional. New Jersey; Multi-Ethnic Center for Ministry, Wesley House, Drew University, 1978-1981.

Have We Overcome? Race Relations Since Brown. Mississippi; University of Mississippi, 1979.

The Avenue; Clayton City. New York; Morrow, 1988.

Coming through the Fire: Surviving Race and Place in America. Durham; Duke University Press, 1996.
Capote, Truman (Thumbnail).jpg Truman Capote Capote, Truman
1924-1984

Truman Capote was born in New Orleans but primarily raised in Monroeville, Alabama, by his mother’s relatives. He formed a lifelong friendship with Harper Lee, who lived next door. Capote moved to New York City with his mother and stepfather in 1933. He pursued writing and, in 1948, published his debut novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms, which drew from his childhood experiences in Monroeville. In 1958, Capote released his acclaimed masterpiece, Breakfast at Tiffany's, exploring themes of love, identity, and belonging. His most significant literary achievement, In Cold Blood, a groundbreaking “nonfiction novel” published in 1966, blurred the lines between fiction and reality, chronicling a brutal set of murders in a small Kansas town. He continued writing but was less successful before his death in 1984.

Truman Capote wrote short stories, novels, play adaptations, essays, travel articles, celebrity portraits, and a story about a series of Kansas murders which he called a "nonfiction novel." A frequent theme in his works is the loneliness that comes from not fitting in. Other Voices, Other Rooms. New York; Random House, 1948.

A Tree of Night and Other Stories. New York; Random House, 1949.

Local Color. New York; Random House, 1950.

The Grass Harp. New York; Random House, 1951.

The Muses are Heard: An Account. New York; Random House, 1956.

Breakfast at Tiffany's. New York; Random House, 1958.

Selected Writings. New York; Random House, 1963.

A Christmas Memory. New York; Random House, 1966.

In Cold Blood. New York; Random House, 1966.

House of Flowers. New York; Random House, 1968.

The Thanksgiving Visitor. New York; Random House, 1968.

The Dog's Bark. New York; Random House, 1973.

Miriam. Mankato; Creative Education, Inc., 1982.

Music for Chameleons: New Writing. New York; Random House, 1983.

One Christmas. New York; Random House, 1983.

Jug of Silver. Mankato; Creative Education, 1986.

I Remember Grandpa: A Story. Atlanta; Peachtree, 1987.

Answered Prayers: The Unfinished Novel. New York; Random House, 1987.

The White Rose. Newton, Iowa; Tamazunchala Press, 1987.
Sledge, EB (Thumbnail).jpg Eugene B. Sledge Sledge, Eugene B.
1923-2001

E.B. Sledge was a native of Mobile, Alabama. After briefly attending Marion Military Institute and the Georgia Institute of Technology, Sledge enlisted in the US Marine Corps and fought in Peleliu and Okinawa during World War II. Although he emerged physically unscathed, the psychological scars took years to heal. Following the war, he pursued higher education, earning a bachelor’s and master’s degree from Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University) before earning a doctorate in zoology from the University of Florida. Sledge then briefly worked for the Florida State Department of Agriculture before embarking on a teaching career at Alabama College (now the University of Montevallo). Sledge's personal accounts of his wartime experiences were initially written for his family but were later published, with the second book released after his passing.

E. B. Sledge wrote candid, detailed memoirs about his World War II combat experience. His memoirs discuss the physical and psychological effects of infantry combat. With the Old Breed, at Peleliu and Okinawa. California; Presidio Press, 1981.

China Marine. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2002.
Deal, Borden (Thumbnail).jpg Borden Deal Deal, Borden
1922-1985

Borden Deal was born in Pontotoc, Mississippi. After serving in the United States Navy during World War II, Deal pursued his education at the University of Alabama under the mentorship of Hudson Strode. He lived in various cities in Alabama during his life, including Tuscaloosa and Scottsboro. Deal’s literary career gained momentum when he won a contest sponsored by the Tomorrow magazine with his short story "Exodus" in 1948. He went on to write novels, short stories, poems, and book reviews, and several of his works were adapted for film and television. Some of his publications were penned under the names Lee Borden, Loyse Deal, or Michael Sunga. Deal received prestigious awards and fellowships for his work, including a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1957. He died of a heart attack in 1985.

Borden Deal wrote novels, short stories, and poems. His works are often set in rural southern communities and reflect a southerner's sense of place and connection to the land. Walk Through the Valley. New York; Scribner, 1950.

Search for Surrender. Greenwich, Conn.; Gold Medal, 1957.

Dunbar Cove. New York; Scribner, 1957.

Killer in the House. New York; New American Library, 1957.

The Secret of Sylvia. Greenwich, CT; Gold Medal, 1958.

The Insolent Breed. New York; Scribner, 1959.

Dragon's Wine. New York; Scribner, 1960.

The Devil's Whisper. New York; Avon, 1961.

The Spangled Road. New York; Scribner, 1962.

The Loser. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1964.

The Tobacco Men. New York; Holt, 1965.

A Long Way to Go. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1965.

The Least One. New York; Doubleday, 1967.

The Advocate. New York; Doubleday, 1968.

Interstate. New York; Doubleday, 1970.

A Neo-Socratic Dialogue on the Reluctant Empire. Baldwyn, Miss.; Outlaw Press, 1971.

The Other Room.Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1974.

Bluegrass. New York; Doubleday, 1976.

Adventure. New York; Doubleday, 1978.

There Were Also Strangers. Far Hills, N.J.; New Horizon Press, 1985.
Henderson, Aileen_Kilgore (Thumbnail).png Aileen Kilgore Henderson Henderson, Aileen Kilgore
1921-2023

Aileen Kilgore Henderson was born and raised in Cedar Creek, Alabama. She experienced the impact of the Great Depression when her family moved to a farm in Brookwood, Alabama. After completing high school, she worked at the S.H. Kress store before joining the Women's Army Corps during World War II. Following her military service, she pursued higher education at the University of Alabama, obtaining a bachelor’s degree in education in 1950. Henderson taught school in Northport, Alabama, and Panther Junction, Texas, before meeting and marrying her husband, a park ranger. She accompanied her husband to different locations across the United States while volunteering and doing museum work. After earning her master’s degree in education from the University of Alabama in 1966, Henderson began her writing career. She published her first children’s novel, The Summer of the Bonepile Monster, in 1995 and continued exploring new genres, publishing magazine articles, short stories for adults, and even memoirs inspired by her experiences in Texas. She passed away early in 2023, at the age of 102.

Aileen Kilgore Henderson wrote children's novels, short stories, and memoirs. Themes in her works include mystery, family, and adventure. The Summer of the Bonepile Monster. Minneapolis; Milkweed Editions, 1995.

The Monkey Thief. Minneapolis; Milkweed Editions, 1997.

Treasure of Panther Peak. Minneapolis; Milkweed Editions, 1998.

Stateside Soldier: Life in the Women's Army Corps, 1944-1945. Columbia, S.C.; University of South Carolina Press, 2001.

Tenderfoot Teacher: Letter from the Big Bend 1953-1954. Fort Worth, Texas; Texas Christian University Press, 2002.

Hard Times for Jake Smith. Minneapolis; Milkweed Editions, 2004.

Eugene Allen Smith's Alabama: How a Geologist Shaped a State. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2011.

The Horses of Lost Valley. Bloomington, Ind.; AuthorHouse, 2016.

The World through the Dime Store Door: A Memoir. Tuscaloosa; University Alabama Press, 2020.
Walter, Eugene (Thumbnail).jpg Eugene Walter Walter, Eugene
1921-1998

Eugene Walter was a native of Mobile, Alabama. During World War II, he worked as a cryptographer for the United States Army Airways Communications Systems. He then moved to New York, where he worked in a rare book store and at the New York Public Library in addition to working on set designs. Walter later moved to Paris and Rome, publishing novels, short stories, poems, articles, essays, and even cookbooks while also editing various magazines and literary journals. In 1979, Walter returned to Mobile and continued writing until his passing in 1998. He was posthumously inducted into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2023.

Eugene Walter wrote articles, short stories, cookbooks, essays, novels, and poems. He often used Alabama as a setting, and he frequently included quirky illustrations with his poems, essays, and articles. Jennie the Watercress Girl. Rome; Willoughby Institute, 1947.

Mobile Mardis Gras Annual, 1948. Alabama; Haunted Book Shop, 1948.

Monkey Poems. New York; Noonday, 1954.

The Untidy Pilgrim. Philadelphia; Lipppincott, 1954.

Singerie-Songerie. Rome; Willoughby Institute, 1958.

Love You Good, See You Later. New York; Scribner, 1964.

American Cooking; Southern Style. Virginia; Time Life Books, 1971.

The Likes of Which. Washington, D.C.; Decatur House Press, 1980.

Byzantine Riddle and Other Stories. London; Methuen, 1985.

The Pokeweed Alphabet; or, a Child Garden of Vices. Alabama; Willoughby Institute, 1981.

The Pack Rat and Other Antics, 1937-1987. Alabama; Willoughby Institute, 1987.

Delectable Dishes from Termite Hall; Rare and Unusual Recipes. New York; Doubleday, 1988.

Hints and Pinches; a Concise Compendium of Herbs, Spices, and Aromatics, with Illustrative Recipes and Asides on Relishes, Chutneys, and Other Such Concerns. Atlanta; Longstreet Press, 1991.

Lizard Fever; Poems lyric, satiric, sardonic, elegaic. Alabama; Livingston University Press, 1994.

Joint Publications:

Shapes of the River. London; Gaberbocchus Press, 1955.
Coleman, Lonnie (Thumbnail).jpg Lonnie Coleman Coleman, Lonnie
1920-1982

Lonnie Coleman was born in Bartow, Georgia, but moved to Montgomery, Alabama when he was twelve years old. He began his journey towards becoming an author during his time at the University of Alabama, where he honed his skills under the guidance of Hudson Strode. While completing his undergraduate degree, he won two short story competitions and wrote several plays produced by the Blackfriars Dramatic Society. After graduating with his bachelor’s degree in 1942, Coleman served in the United States Navy for four years. Coleman’s first novel was published in 1944, but it wasn’t until 1972 that Coleman found significant financial success with the paperback rights of his novel Beulah Land. This achievement allowed him to pursue writing full-time and resulted in the publication of several acclaimed novels. Several of Coleman's works were also adapted for television and the stage over the years. Coleman died of cancer in 1982.

Lonnie Coleman wrote plays, short stories, and novels often set in the South. Themes in his works include loneliness, sexual orientation, love, race, and isolation. Escape the Thunder. New York; E.P. Dutton & Co, 1944.

Time Moving West, or, The Sea is a Woman. New York; E.P. Dutton & Co, 1947.

The Sound of Spanish Voices. New York; Dutton, 1951.

Clara. New York; E.P. Dutton & Co, 1952.

Adam's Way. New York; E.P. Dutton & Co, 1953. 

Ship's Company.
New York; Dell, 1955.

Hot Spell. New York; Avon, 1958.

The Southern Lady. Australia; Hassell Street Press, 1958.

Sam: a Novel.
 New York; D. McKay, 1959.

The Golden Vanity. New York; Macmillan, 1962.

King. New York; McGraw-Hill, 1967.

Beulah Land. New York; Doubleday, 1973.

Orphan Jim. New York; Doubleday, 1975.

Look Away, Beulah Land. New York; Doubleday, 1977.

Legacy of Beulah Land. New York; Dell Publishing Co, 1981.

Mark. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1981.
Windham, Kathryn_Tucker (Thumbnail).jpg Kathryn Tucker Windham Windham, Kathryn Tucker
1918-2011

Kathryn Tucker Windham was born in Selma, Alabama, and developed a passion for journalism and photography during her upbringing in Thomasville, Alabama. She obtained a bachelor’s degree from Huntingdon College in 1939 and then began a career in journalism, working as a freelance journalist, police reporter, and feature writer for various newspapers, including The Alabama Journal and The Birmingham News. Windham's literary contributions extend beyond journalism, with notable books like 13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey, co-authored with Margaret Figh, and her memoir Odd-Egg Editor. She also made a significant impact as a storyteller, participating in storytelling festivals and helping found the National Association for the Preservation and Perpetuation of Storytelling. Windham continued writing until her death in 2011.

Kathryn Tucker Windham wrote short stories, ghost stories, and cookbooks set in the South. She first became interested in writing ghost stories after a ghost named Jeffrey began haunting her family's home. Treasured Alabama Recipes. Alabama; Strode, 1964.

13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey. Alabama; Strode, 1969.

Exploring Alabama. Alabama; Strode, 1970.

Jeffrey Introduces 13 More Southern Ghosts. Alabama; Strode, 1971.

Treasured Tennessee Recipes. Alabama; Strode, 1972.

Thirteen Georgia Ghosts and Jeffrey. Alabama; Strode, 1973.

Treasured Georgia Recipes. Alabama; Strode, 1973.

13 Mississippi Ghosts and Jeffrey. Alabama; Strode, 1974.

Alabama: One Big Front Porch. Alabama; Strode, 1975.

Thirteen Tennessee Ghosts and Jeffrey. Alabama; Strode, 1977.

Southern Cooking to Remember. Alabama; Strode, 1978.

The Ghost in the Sloss Furnaces. Alabama; Birmingham Historical Society, 1978.

Count Those Buzzards! Stamp Those Grey Mules!; Superstitions Remembered from a Southern Childhood. Alabama; Strode, 1979.

Jeffrey's Latest 13: More Southern Ghosts. Alabama; Strode, 1982.

A Serigamy of Stories. Mississippi; University Press of Mississippi, 1988.

Odd-egg Editor. Mississippi; University Press of Mississippi, 1990.

A Sampling of Selma Stories. Alabama; Selma Printing Service, 1991.

My Name is Julia. Alabama; Birmingham Public Library Press, 1991.

The Autobiography of a Bell. Alabama; United Methodist Children's Home, 1991.

Twice-Blessed. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 1995.

Encounters. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 1998.

The Bridal Wreath Bush. Montgomery; Black Belt Press, 1999.

Common Threads. Alabama; CKM Press, 2000.

Piano Lessons and Other Recollections. Alabama; Major Tiara Press, 2000.

It's Christmas! Montgomery; River City Publishers, 2002.

Ernest's Gift. Montgomery; Junebug Books, 2004.

Jeffrey's Favorite 13 Ghost Stories: From Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, and Mississippi. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2004.

Spit, Scarey Ann, & Sweat Bees: One Thing Leads to Another. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2009.

She: The Old Woman Who Took Over My Life. Montgomery; NewSouth Books, 2011.
BrownMaryWard_thumbnail.jpg Mary Ward Brown Brown, Mary Ward
1917-2013

Mary Ward Brown was a native of Hamburg, Alabama. Despite limited access to books during her upbringing on a farm, Brown's passion for writing blossomed through her involvement in high school journalism and her pursuit of English and journalism at Judson College. In 1939, Brown got married and moved to Auburn, Alabama, where she began to write short stories. She continued to write short stories after moving back to Hamburg to manage the family farm after the death of her father. Several of her short stories were published in the 1950s, but Brown stopped writing due to the pressure of running the farm while raising her son. She resumed writing after her husband died in the 1970s. Her notable accolades include the Ernest Hemingway Foundation Award/PEN American Center Award, Alabama Library Association Fiction Award, Lillian Smith Award, Harper Lee Award, and Hillsdale Fiction Prize. Brown died of pancreatic cancer in 2013.

Mary Ward Brown wrote short stories often set in the South. Her works explore themes like racism, religion, and social class. Tongues of Flame. New York; Dutton, 1986.

It Wasn't All Dancing, and Other Stories. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2002.

Fanning the Spark: A Memoir. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 2009.

Sibley, Celestine (Thumbnail).jpg Celestine Sibley Sibley, Celestine
1917-1999

Celestine Sibley was a native of Holley, Florida, but grew up in Mobile, Alabama, and Creola, Alabama. She pursued a career in journalism after graduating high school, working for the Mobile Press-Register, the Pensacola News Journal, and The Atlanta Constitution. Throughout her journalistic career, she covered a variety of topics, including politics and southern culture. She published her first murder mystery, The Malignant Heart, in 1958 and continued branching out to new genres, including history books, biographies, short stories, and novels. In 1988, Sibley published a memoir titled Turned Funny. She continued writing columns until her passing in 1999.

Celestine Sibley wrote news stories, columns, murder mysteries, novels, nonfiction books, and a memoir. Sibley's novels and murder mysteries are set in southern locations where she lived. A Place Called Sweet Apple. New York; Doubleday, 1963.

Peachtree Street, U.S.A.; an Affectionate Portrait of Atlanta. New York; Doubleday, 1963.

Christmas In Georgia, Five Stories. New York; Doubleday, 1964.

Dear Store; an Affectionate Portrait of Rich. New York; Doubleday, 1967.

Especially at Christmas. New York; Doubleday, 1969.

Mothers Are Always Special. New York; Doubleday, 1970.

The Malignant Heart. New York; Doubleday, 1970.

The Sweet Apple Gardening Book. New York; Doubleday, 1972.

Day by Day with Celestine Sibley. New York; Doubleday, 1975.

Small Blessings. New York; Doubleday, 1977.

Jincey. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1978.

The Magical Realm of Sallie Middleton. Alabama; Oxmoor House, 1980.

Children, My Children: a Novel. New York; Harper & Row, 1981.

Young'uns; a Celebration. New York; Harper & Row, 1982.

For All Seasons. Atlanta; Peachtree Publishers, 1984.

Turned Funny: A Memoir. New York; Harper, 1988.

Tokens of Myself: A Memoir. New Orleans; Longstreet Press, 1990.

Ah Sweet Mystery. New York; HarperCollins, 1991.

Straight as an Arrow. New York; HarperCollins, 1992.

Dire Happenings at Scratch Ankle. New York; HarperCollins, 1993.

A Plague of Kinfolks. New York; HarperCollins, 1995.

Celestine Sibley Sampler. Atlanta; Peachtree Publishers, 1997.

Spider in the Sink. New York; HarperCollins, 1997.

Joint Publications:

Atlanta, a Brave and Beautiful City. Atlanta; Peachtree Publisher, 1986.

Callaway Gardens, the Unending Season. Atlanta; Longstreet, 1989.
Brown, Virginia_Pounds (Thumbnail).jpg Virginia Pounds Brown Brown, Virginia Pounds
1916-2014

Virginia Pounds Brown was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. She had a multifaceted career that encompassed librarianship, writing, and bookselling. She earned her bachelor’s degree at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College in 1937, and she earned a master’s degree in library science from Emory University in 1942. After working as reference librarian at Birmingham-Southern College for a couple years, she was promoted to director of the library from 1944-1948. Then, for over two decades, Brown owned and operated a bookstore in Birmingham with her husband. She authored and co-authored books focusing on Alabama's history. In 2003, she published her memoir titled Mother & Me. Brown died in 2014.

Virginia Pounds Brown wrote nonfiction books for adults and children, historical fiction for children, and a memoir. Many of her works explore the history of Indigenous people in Alabama. Alabama, Mounds to Missiles. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1966.

Alabama Heritage. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1967.

The Gold Disc of Coosa. Huntsville, Ala.; Strode, 1975.

Toting the Lead Row: Ruby Pickens Tartt, Alabama Folklorist. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1981.

The World of Southern Indians. Birmingham, Ala.; Beechwood Books, 1983.

Grand Old Days of Birmingham Golf, 1898-1930. Birmingham, Ala.; Beechwood Books, 1984.

Downfall of the Ispocoga or Creek Indian Tribe of Indians. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Public Library, 1989.

Winnataska Remembered. Birmingham, Ala.; Beechwood Books, 1992.

Cochula's Journey. Montgomery, Ala.; Black Belt Press, 1996.

Mother & Me: An Intimate Memoir of Her Last Years. Montgomery, Ala.; NewSouth Books, 2003.
Norris, Helen (Thumbnail).jpg Helen Norris Norris, Helen
1916-2013

Helen Norris was born in Miami, Florida, and later moved with her family to a rural farm near Montgomery, Alabama. She attended the University of Alabama and studied under Hudson Strode, earning her bachelor’s degree in 1938. Norris then obtained her master’s degree from the University of Alabama in 1940 and published her first novel, Something More Than Earth, the same year. Over the years, Norris continued writing novels and short stories, and she also branched out to write poems and plays. Norris's literary achievements were recognized with numerous awards, including her appointment as Poet Laureate for the State of Alabama from 1999 to 2003. She died in 2013 and was inducted posthumously into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2015.

Helen Norris wrote plays, short stories, poems, and novels. Many of her works deal with the abandonment and isolation of children and aging adults and the subsequent longing for love and community. Something More than Earth. Boston; Little, Brown, 1940.

For the Glory of God. New York; Macmillan, 1958.

The Christmas Wife: Stories. Illinois; University of Illinois Press, 1985.

More than Seven Watchmen. Grand Rapids; Zondervan, 1985.

Walk with the Sickle Moon. Secaucus; Birch Lane Press, 1985.

Water into Wine. Illinois; University of Illinois Press, 1988.

The Burning Glass. Louisiana; LSU Press, 1992.

Whatever Is Round. Georgia; Curbow Publications, 1994.

Rain Pulse. Montgomery; Timberline Press, 1997.

One Day in the Life of a Born Again Loser, and Other Stories. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama, 2000.
Murray, Albert (Thumbnail).jpg Albert Murray Murray, Albert
1916-2013

Albert Murray was born in Nokomis, Alabama, but was adopted and raised on the outskirts of Mobile, Alabama. He graduated from Tuskegee Institute with a bachelor’s degree in English in 1939 and then taught in the area for several years. After serving in the United States Army Air Corps for several years and briefly returning to Tuskegee to teach, Murray pursued graduate studies at New York University and earned a master’s degree in 1948. Murray spent time teaching in Tuskegee again before returning to active service in the U.S. Air Force. He left the U.S. Air Force in 1962 and settled in New York City to work on his writing. His notable works include essays, memoirs, novels, and poems, and he even collaborated with jazz musician Count Basie on Basie’s autobiography Good Morning Blues. Murray's literary contributions have been recognized through numerous awards and honors, including the DuBois Medal from the W. E. B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Research. He continued to live and write in New York City until his death in 2013.

Albert Murray wrote short stories, poems, essays, memoirs, and novels. A major theme in his works is the richness of the intersection between African American and American culture. He created a unique style of writing using elements of Black cultural traditions that influenced him while he was growing up in Alabama. The Omni-Americans: New Perspectives on Black Experience and American Culture. New York; Outerbridge and Dienstfrey, 1970.

South to a Very Old Place. New York; McGraw, 1972.

The Hero and the Blues. Columbia; University of Missouri Press, 1973.

Train Whistle Guitar. New York; McGraw Hill, 1974.

Stomping the Blues. New York; McGraw Hill, 1976.

Reflections on Logic, Politics, and Reality: A Challenge to the Sacred Consensus of Contemporary American Thinking. New York; Braimanna Publishers, 1989.

The Spyglass Tree. New Year; Pantheon, 1991.

The Seven League Boots. New York; Pantheon, 1996.

The Blue Devils of Nada: Contemporary American Approach to Aesthetic Statements. New York; Pantheon, 1996.

Conversations with Albert Murray. Kackson; University Press of Mississippi, 1997.

Trading Twelves: The Selected Letters of Ralph Ellison and Albert Murray. New York; Knopf, 2000.

Conjugations and Reiterations. New York; Pantheon Books, 2001.

From the Briarpatch File: On Context, Procedure, and American Identity. New York; Pantheon, 2001.

The Magic Keys. New York; Pantheon Books, 2005.

Joint Publications:

Good Morning Blues; The Autobiography of Count Basie. New York; Random House, 1985.
Rodgers, Catherine (Thumbnail).png Catherine Rodgers Rodgers, Catherine
1916-2004

Catherine Rodgers was a native of Camp Hill, Alabama, and exhibited an interest in storytelling since childhood. She earned her bachelor’s degree from Alabama Polytechnic Institute in 1938 having already sold her first short story to The Birmingham News-Age Herald the year before. Rodgers went on to earn a master’s degree from Alabama Polytechnic Institute and also studied under Hudson Strode at the University of Alabama. Throughout her life, Rodgers maintained a commitment to writing while balancing a teaching career. Her only published novel, The Towers Inheritance, was released in 1958. Rodgers continued to write until her passing in 2004.

Catherine Rodgers wrote short stories and novels. Her only published novel is set in and around her birthplace of Camp Hill, Alabama, just after the turn of the 20th century. The Towers Inheritance. New York; Doubleday, 1958.
Percy, Walker (Thumbnail).jpg Walker Percy Percy, Walker
1916-1990

Walker Percy was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. Despite initially pursuing a career in medicine, Percy's battle with tuberculosis led him to explore his interests in literature and philosophy. Settling in Covington, Louisiana, he wrote essays on philosophy and semiotics, but it was his first published novel, The Moviegoer, set in New Orleans, that garnered critical acclaim and won the National Book Award in 1962. Percy continued to write and publish novels and nonfiction, receiving accolades such as the T. S. Eliot Award for Creative Writing in 1988. His literary contributions earned him membership in esteemed institutions like the National Institute of Arts and Letters before his death in 1990.

Walker Percy wrote nonfiction and novels. All of his novels are set in the South. His works are heavily influenced by his philosophical and religious beliefs and portray people in the disordered 20th century. The Moviegoer. New York; Knopf, 1961.

The Last Gentleman. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966.

Love in the Ruins. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1971.

The Message in the Bottle. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1975.

Lancelot. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1977.

Bourbon. Winston-Salem, N.C.; Palaemon Press, 1979.

Questions They Never Asked Me. Northridge, Calif.; Lord John Press, 1979.

The Second Coming. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1980.

Lost in the Cosmos; the Last Self-help Book. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1983.

Diagnosing the Northern Malaise. New Orleans, La.; Forest Pub., 1985.

The State of the Novel; Dying Art or New Science. New Orleans, La.; Faust, 1987.

The Thanatos Syndrome. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1987.

Signposts in a Savage Land. New York; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1991.
Walker, Margaret (Thumbnail).jpg Margaret Walker Walker, Margaret
1915-1998

Margaret Walker was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama, before her family relocated to New Orleans during her childhood. Walker's exposure to her grandmother's stories about slavery, along with her parents' encouragement, sparked her passion for writing at a young age. She pursued higher education at New Orleans University and Northwestern University, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in English. Her involvement with the Works Progress Administration's Federal Writers Project in Chicago connected her with writer Richard Wright, who helped with some writing projects. In 1939, Walker returned to higher education, and in 1940 she earned a master’s degree from the University of Iowa. Her thesis was published as the poetry collection For My People in 1942. Walker's career included teaching positions at various institutions, including Jackson State College, and she also established the Institute for the Study of the History, Life, and Culture of Black People. She earned a doctorate from the University of Iowa in 1965. Her dissertation was based on her grandmother’s stories of slavery and became her acclaimed novel Jubilee. Walker died of breast cancer in 1998.

Margaret Walker was a poet, novelist, educator, and literary critic. Her work focuses on the lives of Black Americans and is influenced by historical events and people. For My People. New Haven; Yale University Press, 1942.

Jubilee, a Civil War Novel. Iowa City; University of Iowa Press, 1955.

Prophets For a New Day. Detroit; Broadside Press, 1970.

October Journey. Detroit; Broadside Press, 1970.

A Brief Introduction to Southern Literature. Mississippi; Literary Seminar, Mississippi Arts Festival, 1977.

How I wrote Jubilee and Other Essays on Life and Literature. New York; Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1989.
Clarke, John_Henrik (Thumbnail).jpg John Henrik Clarke Clarke, John Henrik
1915-1998

John Henrik Clarke was born in Union Springs, Alabama and spent part of his childhood in Columbus, Georgia, after a storm destroyed his family’s home. After migrating to Harlem, New York, in 1933, he pursued self-education through public libraries and engaged with the Harlem History Club, nurturing his passion for Black history. Clarke's literary pursuits encompassed poetry, short stories, and historical articles, while his role as an educator and advocate for African studies led him to teach at esteemed institutions such as the New School for Social Research, Cornell University, and Hunter College. Clarke's significant contributions to the Pan-African movement and his dedication to African American history and culture earned him numerous accolades and recognition. He died of a heart attack in 1998.

John Henrik Clarke wrote poems, short stories, and nonfiction. His works are inspired by his experience as a Black American. Several of his nonfiction books are about the Pan-African movement, also called Afrocentrism. Rebellion in Rhyme. Illinois; Decker Press, 1948.

Black Americans, Immigrants Against Their Will. Atlanta; Atlanta University, 1974.

The Influence of African Cultural Continuity on the Slave Revolts in South America and in the Caribbean Islands. Atlanta; Atlanta University, 1974.

Black-White Alliances, 1970. Chicago; Institute of Positive Education, 1976.

Dimensions of the Struggle Against Apartheid. New York; African Heritage Studies Association, 1979.

Africans at the Crossroads: Notes for an African World Revolution. Trenton; Africa World Press, 1991.

Christopher Columbus and the African Holocaust. A & B Books, 1992.

African People in World History. Halethorpe; Black Classic Press, 1993.

Who Betrayed the African World Revolution and Other Speeches. Chicago; Third World Press, 1995.

Critical Lessons in Slavery and the Slavetrade. Richmond; Native Sun Publishers, 1996.

My Life in Search of Africa. Chicago; Third World Press, 1999.

Joint Publications:

New Dimensions in African History: The London Lectures of Dr. Josef be-Jochannan and Dr. John Henrik Clarke. Trenton; Africa World Press, 1996.
Brown, Joe_David (Thumbnail).jpg Joe David Brown Brown, Joe David
1915-1976

Joe David Brown was born in Birmingham, Alabama. He started his career as a reporter for the Birmingham Post before becoming the city editor for the Dothan Eagle. After working for newspapers in Atlanta, Chattanooga, and St. Louis, Brown began working at New York Daily News. Brown served as a paratrooper in the United States Army during World War II before briefly returning to New York Daily News. He began publishing short stories in The Saturday Evening Post and published his first novel, Stars in My Crown, in 1946. A movie adaptation of his first novel was released in 1950. Brown worked for Time magazine for eight years before leaving to pursue freelance work. He died in 1976.

Joe David Brown wrote short stories and novels influenced by his own life. His works drew from a broad range of experiences, including being the grandson of a minister and traveling in India on a journalism assignment. Stars in My Crown. New York; Morrow, 1946.

The Freeholder. New York; Morrow, 1949.

Kings Go Forth. New York; Morrow, 1956.

India. Chicago; Time-Life, 1961.

Glimpse of a Stranger. New York; Morrow, 1968.

Addie Pray. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1971 (also published in 1972 as Paper Moon).
placeholder.png Julia Truitt Yenni Yenni, Julia Truitt
1913-2000

Julia Truitt Yenni [Hikes] was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. She briefly attended Lincoln Memorial University before relocating to New York City. She began her writing career while working as a secretary and attending night classes at Columbia University. She moved to Chicago for a few years before returning to New York, publishing three novels during that time. Her last novel was published in 1951, but she continued to write articles and stories for women's magazines afterwards. Later in life, she resided in Pine Grove, Pennsylvania, where she contributed a weekly column to the local newspaper. In 1983, Yenni moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to be closer to her adult children, and she remained there until her passing in 2000.

Julia Truitt Yenni wrote coming-of-age stories about young women trying to find their place in society while maintaining some personal freedom. Never Say Goodbye. New York; Reynal and Hitchcock, 1937.

This is Me, Kathie; a Novel. New York; Reynal and Hitchcock, 1938.

House for the Sparrow. New York; Reynal and Hitchcock, 1942.

The Spellbound Village. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1951.
Sorensen, Virginia (Thumbnail).jpg Virginia Sorensen Sorenson, Virginia
1912-1991

Virginia Sorensen was born in Provo, Utah, and moved to Manti, Utah, and American Fork, Utah, while growing up. After earning a bachelor’s degree from Brigham Young University in 1934, Sorensen moved frequently, living in places like Indiana, Michigan, Alabama, and Pennsylvania. Sorensen published her debut novel, A Little Lower Than the Angels, in 1942 and went on to publish additional novels, children’s books, and short stories. Sorensen's work garnered recognition and grants, including two Guggenheim Fellowships that allowed her to conduct research in Mexico and Denmark. She was living in Hendersonville, North Carolina, at the time of her passing in 1991.

Virginia Sorensen wrote short stories, children's books, and novels inspired by the places she was living. Major themes in her novels include Mormonism and the complexities of life. A Little Lower than Angels. New York; Knopf, 1942.

The Neighbors. New York; Reynal & Hitchcock, 1946.

On This Star. New York; Reynal & Hitchcock, 1946.

The Evening and the Morning. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1949.

The Proper Gods. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1951.

Curious Missie. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1953.

The House Next Door; Utah 1896. New York; Scribner, 1954.

Many Heavens; a New Mormon Novel. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1954.

Plain Girl. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1955.

Miracles on Maple Hill. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1956.

Kingdom Come. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1960.

Where Nothing is Long Ago; Memories of a Mormon Childhood. New York; Harcourt Brace, 1963.

Lotte's Locket. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1964.

Around the Corner. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1971.

The Man with the Key. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1974.

Friends of the Road. New York; Atheneum, 1978.
Bailey, Douglas Fields (Thumbnail).png Douglas Fields Bailey Bailey, Douglas Fields
1912-1987

Douglas Fields Bailey was born in Dothan, Alabama. He was mentored by creative writing professor Hudson Strode at the University of Alabama. Bailey also attended Birmingham-Southern College and the University of Missouri before leaving academia to pursue a journalism career in Marianna, Florida, and Dothan. In 1945, Bailey began working in insurance during the day and writing a novel at night. Strode sent a manuscript of Bailey’s novel, Devil Make a Third, to a publisher in New York, and it was published in 1948. Bailey then pursued a career in business and didn’t publish anything else. He died in Dothan in 1987.

Douglas Fields Bailey wrote a coming-of-age novel called Devil Make a Third. It is set in Dothan, Alabama and is partially based on Bailey's family.

Devil Make a Third. New York; Dutton, 1948.
Counselman, Mary_Elizabeth.jpg Mary Elizabeth Counselman Counselman, Mary Elizabeth
1911-1994

Mary Elizabeth Counselman was born in Birmingham, Alabama, but spent part of her childhood in Gainesville, Georgia. She began writing poetry at a young age and later pursued her education at Alabama College (now the University of Montevallo) and the University of Alabama. She worked as a reporter for The Birmingham News before settling in Gadsden, Alabama, where she taught creative writing at Gadsden State Junior College and the University of Alabama. Counselman gained recognition for her contributions to pulp magazines, with her most famous publication being the short story "The Three Marked Pennies" in Weird Tales. Her works also appeared in mainstream publications, and some of her stories were even adapted for television. Counselman died in 1994.

Mary Elizabeth Counselman wrote short stories, poetry, and essays. Her stories were written in the genres of science fiction, horror, and fantasy. Move Over: It's Only Me. Alabama; Verity, 1975.

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about the Supernatural. Gadsden, Ala.; Verity, 1976.

African Yesterdays. Alabama; Verity Publishing, 1975; revised edition, 1977.

Half in Shadow. Wisconsin; Arkham House, 1978.

The Eye and the Hand.  S.l.; s.n., 1978.

The Fifth Door. S.l.; Strange Books, 1982.

The Face of Fear and Other Poems. Florida; Edilon Press, 1984.
placeholder.png Harriet Hassell Hassel, Harriet
1911-1970

Harriet Hassell was raised on a farm near Northport, Alabama, and demonstrated an early passion for writing. She enrolled at the University of Alabama at fifteen years old but left before finishing her degree, choosing to return home to work on her writing. Seven years later, she re-enrolled at the university and joined a fiction-writing class taught by Hudson Strode. Her short story "History of the South" gained recognition, winning a national contest and appearing in the anthology Spring Harvest. In 1938, Hassell published her novel Rachel's Children, which received favorable reviews. Despite the initial success, she chose not to publish any further works and instead married a local attorney and relocated to Port Washington, Long Island, New York, where she resided until her passing in 1970.

Harriet Hassell was a short story writer and novelist. Her short story "History of the South" is praised for its depiction of southern family life while her novel Rachel's Children focuses on the toxic relationship between a mother and her children.

Rachel's Children. New York; Harper, 1938; Rpt. University of Alabama Press, 1990.
Huie, William_Bradford (Thumbnail).jpg William Bradford Huie Huie, William Bradford
1910-1986

William Bradford Huie was a native of Hartselle, Alabama. After graduating from the University of Alabama in 1930, he embarked on a successful career in journalism, working as a reporter for the Birmingham Post and later as the editor and publisher of American Mercury. Huie's literary contributions encompassed both fiction and nonfiction, with notable works like The Klansman and He Slew the Dreamer. He was known to delve into controversial subjects such as racism, the Emmett Till case, and the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. Huie died in 1986 and was posthumously inducted into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2018.

William Bradford Huie was an investigative journalist and a writer of both fiction and nonfiction. He drew inspiration from his time in the Navy during World War II and the civil rights movement. He was criticized for participating in "checkbook journalism," the practice of paying people for their stories. Mud on the Stars. New York; L.B. Fischer, 1942.

The Fight for Air Power. New York; L.B. Fischer, 1942.

Can Do! the Story of the Seabees. New York; Dutton, 1944.

Seabee Roads to Victory. New York; Dutton, 1944.

From Omaha to Okinawa. New YorK; Dutton, 1945.

The Case Against the Admirals. New York; Dutton, 1946.

The Revolt of Mamie Stover. New York; Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1951.

The Execution of Private Slovik. New York; Delacorte, 1954.

Ruby McCollum, Woman in the Suwannee Jail. New York; Dutton, 1956.

Wolf Whistle. New York; New American Library, 1959.

The Americanization of Emily. New York; Dutton, 1959.

The Hero of Iwo Jima. New York; New American Library, 1960.

Hotel Mamie Stover. New York; Clarkson N. Potter, 1963.

The Hiroshima Pilot. New York; Putnam, 1964.

Three Lives for Mississippi. New York; WCC Books, 1965.

The Klansman. New York; Delacorte, 1967.

He Slew the Dreamer. New York; Delacorte Press, 1969.

In the Hours of Night. New York; Delacorte, 1975.

A New Life to Live. Nashville; T. Nelson, 1977.

Did the F.B.I. Kill Martin Luther King? Nashville; T. Nelson, 1977.

It's Me O Lord! Nashville; T. Nelson, 1979.
Carr, Archie (Thumbnail).png Archie Carr Carr, Archie
1909-1987

Archie Carr was born in Mobile, Alabama, but moved to Fort Worth, Texas, when he was young. He developed a deep interest in nature during his childhood camping trips. His educational journey took him to various institutions, where he studied English and zoology, and he eventually earned a PhD from the University of Florida. Carr's research and conservation efforts focused on sea turtles, leading him to establish the Caribbean Conservation Corporation and receive prestigious awards for his contributions to the field. Alongside his scientific publications, Carr also wrote works for the general audience, exploring topics such as his first trip to Africa and the natural history of sea turtles. Carr died of stomach cancer in Florida in 1987. His legacy lives on through the Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge and posthumously published works.

Archie Carr wrote nonfiction about science, nature, history, and travel. He is best remembered for bringing attention to the world's declining sea turtle populations. A Contribution to the Herpetology of Florida. Florida; University of Florida, 1940.

Outline for a Classification of Animal Habitats in Honduras. New York; American Museum of Natural History, 1950.

Handbook of Turtles: The Turtles of the United States, Canada, and Baja, California. New York; Comstock, 1952.

High Jungles and Low. Florida; University of Florida Press, 1953.

The Windward Road. New York; Knopf, 1956.

Guideposts of Animal Navigation. Boston; Heath, 1962.

The Land and Wildlife of Africa. Chicago; Time, 1964.

Ulendo. New York; Knopf, 1964.

So Excellent a Fishe. Garden City, NY; Natural History Press, 1967.

The Turtle: A Natural History of the Turtle. London; Cassell, 1968.

The Everglades. Chicago; Time-Life Books, 1973.

The Green Turtle in the Caribbean Sea. New York; American Museum of Natural History, 1978.

Africa. Connecticut; H.S. Stuttman, 1980.

A Naturalist in Florida: A Celebration of Eden. Yale University Press, 1994.

Joint Publications:

Guide to the Reptiles, Amphibians, and Freshwater Fishes of Florida. Gainesville, Fla.; University of Florida Press, 1955.

The Green Turtle in the Gulf of Aden and the Seychelles Islands. Amsterdam; North Holland Publishing, 1970.

Turtle Farming Project in Northern Australia. Canberra; Australian Government Publishing Service, 1973.

Questions and Answers on Sea Turtle Conservation. Tallahassee, Fla.; The Caribbean Conservation Corporation, 1975.

The Ecology and Migration of Sea Turtles: The West Caribbean Green Turtle Colony. New York; American Museum of Natural History, 1978.

Surveys of Sea Turtle Populations and Habitats in the Western Atlantic. Panama City, Fla.; U.S. Dept of Commerce, 1982.
Blassingame_Wyatt_thumbnail.jpg Wyatt Blassingame Blassingame, Wyatt
1909-1985

Wyatt Blassingame was born in Demopolis, Alabama. After attending Howard College and transferring to the University of Alabama, he graduated in 1930 with a bachelor’s degree. Blassingame briefly worked as a police reporter for The Montgomery Advertiser before beginning his graduate studies at the University of Alabama. However, he departed without completing his thesis in 1933. Blassingame moved to New York City, where he focused on writing and found success selling short stories to mystery magazines. He married in 1936 and settled on Anna Maria Island in Florida. He taught writing at Florida Southern College from 1948 to 1951 and later taught at Manatee Junior College. His first book, a collection of mystery stories titled John Smith Hears Death Walking, was published in 1944. Blassingame continued writing and published many books, including novels and children's books. Blassingame died in Bradenton, Florida, in 1985.

Wyatt Blassingame wrote fiction and nonfiction children's books, short stories, and novels. Many of his works are set in Florida. Themes in his writing include mystery, folklore, and history. John Smith Hears Death Walking. New York; Bartholomew House, 1944.

For Better, For Worse. New York; Crowell, 1951.

Great Trains of the World. New York; Random, 1953.

The French Foreign Legion. New York; Random, 1955.

Live from the Devil. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1959.

They Rode the Frontier. New York; Watts, 1959.

The Golden Geyser. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1961.

Halo of Spears. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1962.

Out-Island Doctor. Garden City, NY; Doubleday, 1963.

The First Book of Florida. New York; Watts, 1963.

The US Frogmen of World War II. New York; Random, 1964.

The First Book of the Seashore. New York; Watts, 1964.

Naturalist Explorers. New York; Watts, 1964.

Stephen Decatur, Fighting Sailor. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1964.

The First Book of American Expansion. New York; Watts, 1965.

Ponce de Leon, A World Explorer. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1965.

Sacagawea: Indian Guide. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1965.

Franklin D. Roosevelt: Four Times President. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1966.

Baden-Powell. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1966.

Bowleg Bill. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1967.

Bent Fort: Crossroads of the Great West. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1967.

Combat Nurses of World War II. New York; Random, 1967.

Navy's Fliers in World War II. Philadelphia, PA; Westminister, 1967.

Osceola. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1967.

Eleanor Roosevelt. New York; Putnam, 1968.

The Look-it-up Book of Presidents. New York; Random, 1968.

The Story of the Boy Scouts. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1968.

The Story of the United States Flag. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1969.

Medical Corps Heroes of World War II. New York; Random House, 1969.

Jake Gaither; Winning Coach. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1969.

Halsey: Five-Star Admiral. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1970.

William Tecumseh Sherman, Defender of the Union. Englewood Cliffs, NJ; Prentice, 1970.

Diving for Treasure. Philadelphia; Macrae-Smith, 1971.

Ernest Thompson Seton. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1971.

John Henry and Paul Bunyan Play Baseball. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1971.

Joseph Stalin and Communist Russia. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1971.

How Davy Crockett Got a Bearskin Coat. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1972.

Dan Beard, Scoutmaster of America. Champaign, Ill.: Garrard, 1972.

Jim Beckwourth, Black Trapper and Indian Chief. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1973.

Wonders of Alligators and Crocodiles. New York; Dodd, 1973.

Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1973.

The Everglades, from Yesterday to Tomorrow. New York; Putnam, 1974.

Paul Bunyan Fights the Monster Plants. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1974.

The Little Killers: Fleas, Lice, Mosquitos. New York; Putnam, 1975.

Wonders of Frogs and Toads. New York; Dodd, 1975.

Science Catches the Criminal. New York; Dodd, 1975.

William Beebe, Underwater Explorer. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1976.

Wonders of The Turtle World. New York; Dodd, 1976.

Pecos Bill Catches a Hidebehind. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1977.

Wonders of Raccoons. New York; Dodd, 1977.

Pecos Bill and the Wonderful Clothesline Snake. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1978.

Thor Heyerdahl, Viking Scientist. New York; Elseyier/Nelson, 1979.

Wonders of Crows. New York; Dodd, 1979.

The Incas and the Spanish Conquest. New York; J Messner, 1980.

Porcupines. New York; Dodd, 1982.

Skunks. New York; Dodd, 1981.

Underwater Warriors. New York; Random House, 1982.

Wonders of Egrets, Bitterns, and Herons. New York; Dodd, 1982.

His Kingdom for a Horse. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1983.

The Strange Armadillo. New York; Dodd, 1983.

Wonders of Sharks. New York; Dodd, 1984.

Joint Publications:


The Mountain Men. New York; F Watts, 1962.

Frontier Doctors. New York; F Watts, 1963.

Men Who Opened the West. New York; Putnam, 1966.
James_Agee_thumbnail.png James Agee Agee, James
1909-1955

James Agee was born in Knoxville, Tennessee. He first began writing poetry and short stories while attending Phillips Exeter Academy, in Exeter, N.H. After graduating from Harvard in 1932, he began working for Fortune magazine in New York City. He was sent to Alabama for eight weeks with photographer Walker Evans to gather material for a story about tenant farmers in 1936, but the material turned into the book Let Us Now Praise Famous Men instead of a magazine article. Agee began writing reviews for Time magazine in 1939, and he became a movie columnist for The Nation in 1942. In 1948, he quit his magazine jobs to pursue novel writing and screenwriting. His most prominent screenplays were The African Queen and The Night of the Hunter. He died in New York City in 1955. His posthumously published semi-autobiographical novel A Death in the Family was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1958.

James Agee wrote poetry, short stories, novels, and screenplays. He was interested in both the physical and the psychological. Permit Me Voyage. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1934.

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1941. Rpt. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2001.

A Death in the Family. New York: McDowell, Obolensky, 1957. Rpt. as A Death in the Family: A Restoration of the Author's Text. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2007.

Agee on Film: Reviews and Comments. New York: McDowell, Obolensky, 1958.

Agee on Film: Volume Two: Five Film Scripts. New York: McDowell, Obolensky, 1960.

The Collected Poems of James Agee. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1968.
Julian_Lee_Rayford.jpg Julian Lee Rayford Rayford, Julian Lee
1908-1980

Julian Lee Rayford was a native of Mobile, Alabama. He demonstrated artistic aptitude from an early age and devoted his life to artistic pursuits like creating sculptures and writing. Throughout his career, he engaged in diverse experiences, including studying at Duke University, apprenticing with the renowned sculptor Gutzon Borglum, and contributing to the war effort during World War II. Over the years, Rayford published collections of poetry and folklore, novels, and nonfiction books while working as a sculptor and reporter. He also played an active role in preserving and promoting Mobile's cultural heritage and created the Farragut-Buchanan sculpture located in Bienville Square. He died of cancer in 1980.

Julian Lee Rayford wrote nonfiction, poetry, and novels. Themes in his works include Mobile, war, boyhood, and history. Ancient Doorways. New York; Teufelsdrockh Press, 1932.

The First Christmas Dinner. Alabama; Rapier House, 1947.

Child of the Snapping Turtle: Mike Fink. New York; Abelard Press, 1951.

Chasin' the Devil Round a Stump. Mobile; American Publishing Company, 1962.

Cottonmouth. New York; Scribner, 1941; Rpt. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1991.
Watkins, Lucile (Thumbnail).jpg Lucile Watkins Ellison Ellison, Lucile Watkins
1907-1979

Lucile Watkins Ellison was a native of Pennington, Alabama. She obtained a bachelor's degree from Mississippi State College for Women (now Mississippi University for Women) before working as a teacher and reporter in Meridian, Mississippi. In the late 1930s, Ellison relocated to Washington, D.C., where she worked for the National Education Association for over three decades. After being diagnosed with cancer in the 1970s, Ellison began writing what she called “the Lucy stories,” a collection inspired by her own family. Butter on Both Sides, her debut book, was published in 1979 shortly before her passing, while two additional works were released posthumously.

Lucile Watkins Ellison wrote children's books based on her own experiences growing up in rural Alabama. The characters in her stories are based on her family members. Butter on Both Sides. New York; Scribner, 1979.

The Tie that Binds. New York; Scribner, 1981.

A Window to Look Through. New York; Scribner, 1982.
Tarry, Ellen (Thumbnail).jpg Ellen Tarry Tarry, Ellen
1906-2008

Ellen Tarry was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. After graduating from the State Normal School (now Alabama State University) in Montgomery, Tarry taught for several years in Birmingham while also writing for The Birmingham Truth. In 1929, she relocated to New York City, where she became involved in the Negro Writers' Guild and worked for the Federal Writers Project. Her experiences volunteering at Friendship House, a Catholic interracial outreach center in Harlem, influenced her writing, inspiring two children’s books. Over the years, she continued writing children’s books and branched out to write biographies and an autobiography. She was also a civil rights activist and participated in the 1963 March on Washington and the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery. Tarry wrote children’s books late into her life and died in New York City in 2008.

Ellen Tarry was a writer of young adult biographies, children's books, feature stories, and an autobiography. Her works feature themes like Catholicism and Black heritage. Janie Belle. New York; Garden City Publishing, 1940.

Hezekiah Horton. New York; Viking, 1942.

My Dog Rinty. New York; The Viking Press, 1946; new edition, 1964.

The Runaway Elephant. New York; The Viking Press, 1950.

The Third Door; the Autobiography of an American Negro Woman. New York; McKay, 1955; reprinted, Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1993.

Katharine Drexel; Friend of the Neglected. New York; Farrar, Straus, 1958.

Martin de Porres, Saint of the New World. New York; Vision Books, 1963.

Young Jim; the Early Years of James Weldon Johnson. New York; Dodd, 1967.

The Other Toussaint. Boston; St. Paul Editions, 1981.

Pierre Toussaint; Apostle of Old New York. Virginia; Pauline Books, 1998.
Still, James (Thumbnail).jpg James Still Still, James
1906-2001

James Still was born and raised on a farm near LaFayette, Alabama. He earned a master’s degree in English from Vanderbilt University in 1930 and a bachelor’s degree in library science from the University of Illinois in 1931 before becoming a librarian at Hindman Settlement School in Kentucky’s Appalachian region. Still’s first poetry collection, Hounds on the Mountain, was published in 1937, and he quit his librarian job a couple years later so that he could immerse himself in his community and write full-time. His first novel, River of Earth, was inspired by the lives of locals. Still went on to serve in the Army Air Force, work as a librarian, and become an English professor at Morehead State University. He also continued producing works across various genres, including novels, short stories, folklore, children’s books, and poetry. Recognized with prestigious awards and accolades, including two Guggenheim Fellowships, Still's contributions to literature solidified his position as Poet Laureate of Kentucky from 1995-1996. He continued writing until his death in 2001.

James Still wrote poetry, novels, collections of folklore, short stories, and children's books. His works aim to depict Appalachian life fairly and respectfully. A major theme in his writing is surviving and finding security in a challenging, ever-evolving world. Hounds on the Mountain. New York; Viking Press, 1937.

River of Earth. New York; Viking, 1940.

On Troublesome Creek. New York; Viking, 1941.

Way Down Yonder on Troublesome Creek. New York; Putnam, 1974.

The Wolfpen Rusties. New York; Putnam, 1975.

Jack and the Wonder Beans. New York; Putnam, 1976.

Patterns of Man & Other Stories. Lexington; Gnomon, 1976.

Sporty Creek. New York; Putnam, 1977.

The Run of the Elbertas. Lexington; University Press of Kentucky, 1980.

River of Earth, the Poem and Other Poems. Lexington; King Library Press, 1983.

The Wolfpen Poems. Berea; Berea College Press, 1986.

Rusties, Riddles, and Gee-Haw Whimmy-Diddles. Lexington; University of Kentucky Press, 1989.

The Wolfpen Notebooks; a Record of Appalachian Life. Kentucky; University of Kentucky Press, 1991.

From the Mountain, From the Valley: New and Collected Poems. Lexington; University Press of Kentucky, 2001.

Chinaberry. Lexington; University Press of Kentucky, 2011.

The Hills Remember: The Complete Short Stories of James Still. Lexington; University Press of Kentucky, 2012.
Hay, Sara (Thumbnail).png Sara Henderson Hay Hay, Sara Henderson
1906-1987

Sara Henderson Hay, originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, had early connections to Anniston, Alabama through her mother's roots. After relocating to Anniston, Hay attended high school and began publishing her poems in The Anniston Star. She pursued higher education at Brenau College in Georgia and later transferred to Columbia University in New York City. After graduation, Hay worked for the publishing company Charles Scribner's Sons while continuing to write and publish poetry. Her poetry collection Field of Honor won a contest in 1933 and was subsequently published. Hay continued to write while also taking jobs as a secretary and, later, as a reviewer. Some of her notable works include The Delicate Balance and Story Hour. She received several accolades for her poetry and was recognized as a Distinguished Daughter of Pennsylvania. Her final book, A Footing on This Earth, was published in 1966 before her passing in 1987.

Sara Henderson Hay was a poet. She wrote about themes like family and home, and many of her poems retell classic fairy tales. Fields of Honor. Dallas; Kaleidograph Press, 1933.

This, My Letter. New York; Knopf, 1939.

The Delicate Balance. New York; Scribner, 1951.

The Stone and the Shell. Pittsburgh; University of Pittsburgh Press, 1959.

The Story Hour. New York; Doubleday, 1963.

The Footing on the Earth. New York; Doubleday, 1966.
Weld, John (Thumbnail).png John Weld Weld, John
1905-2003

John Weld was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. After attending military schools as a teenager, he briefly studied at Alabama Polytechnic Institute before venturing to Kansas City and eventually settling in Hollywood. Although initially working as a movie stuntman, Weld's passion for writing led him to become a journalist. After he sold his first short story in 1927, he resigned from his job and moved to Paris, where he worked for several newspapers and wrote two novels. Weld briefly returned to Hollywood but moved to New York after losing his job due to Depression cutbacks. He began researching the Donner Party for a novel and continued his research after moving to Berkeley, California, in 1935. He moved around California a couple more times, publishing several more books, and he branched out to create travel documentaries in the 1960s and early 1970s. He continued writing until he died in Monarch Beach, Dana Point, California, in 2003.

John Weld was a journalist and writer of fiction and nonfiction. He set multiple historical novels in the American West. Gun Girl. New York; McBride, 1930.

Stunt Man. New York; McBride, 1931.

Don't You Cry for Me. New York; Scribner, 1940.

The Pardners. New York; Scribner, 1941.

Sabbath Has No End. New York; Scribner, 1942.

Mark Pfeiffer, M.D. New York; Scribner, 1943.

The Missionary; a Novel of the Early Southwest. Virginia; Northwoods Press, 1981.

Young Man in Paris. Chicago; Academy Chicago, 1985.

Fly Away Home. Santa Barbara; Mission Pub., 1991.

Laguna, I Love You: The Best of Our Town. Santa Barbara, Calif.; Fithian Press, 1996.

September Song: An Intimate Biography of Walter Huston. Lanham, Md.; The Scarecrow Press, 1998.
Hellman_Lillian_thumbnail.jpg Lillian Hellman Hellman, Lillian
1905-1984

Lillian Hellman was born in New Orleans and spent part of her time in New York while growing up. She attended New York University but left without a degree, deciding to pursue work as a manuscript reader before shifting her focus to writing plays. The play, The Children’s Hour, was her first to be produced. It opened on Broadway in 1933 before Hellman moved to Hollywood to be a screenwriter for MGM. She continued dividing her time between Hollywood and New York while writing screenplays and plays for well over a decade. Two of her plays, The Little Foxes and Another Part of the Forest, are inspired by Demopolis, Alabama, where her mother grew up. During the McCarthy era, Hellman’s involvement in leftist political causes led to accusations of being a Communist, resulting in her being blacklisted from Hollywood. Despite these occurrences, she continued to write plays, later turning her attention to writing memoirs that offered her perspective on the events of that era. Hellman died of a heart attack in 1984.

Lillian Hellman wrote plays and screenplays defined by their vivid characters and didactic tone. She also wrote memoirs about her life and acquaintances, but they were met with accusations of fabrication and inaccuracy. The Children's Hour. New York; A.A. Knopf, 1935. Rpt. in The Collected Plays. Boston; Little, Brown, 1972.

The Little Foxes. New York; Random House, 1939. Rpt. in The Collected Plays. Boston; Little, Brown, 1972.

Watch on the Rhine: A Play in Three Acts. New York; Random House, 1941. Rpt. in The Collected Plays. Boston; Little, Brown, 1972.

Another Part of the Forest: A Play in Three Acts. New York; Random House, 1947. Rpt. in The Collected Plays. Boston; Little, Brown, 1972.

Toys in the Attic: A New Play. New York; Random House, 1960. Rpt. in The Collected Plays. Boston; Little, Brown, 1972.

An Unfinished Woman: A Memoir. Boston; Little, Brown, 1969. Rpt. Boston; Little, Brown, 1999.

Pentimento: A Book of Portraits. Boston; Little, Brown, 1973.

Scoundrel Time. Boston; Little, Brown, 1976.
Weaver, Annie_Vaughan (Thumbnail).jpg Annie Vaughan Weaver Weaver, Annie Vaughan
1905-1982

Annie Vaughan Weaver grew up on her family’s plantation in Selma, Alabama. She graduated from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, but decided not to become a missionary like she had initially planned. Instead, she wrote and illustrated children’s books to raise money for her to study art in New York. She studied at several art institutions, including the Cooper Union Art School and the National Academy of Design, and received fellowships to study Romanesque architecture in Europe. Weaver later taught at the Norton Gallery and School of Art in West Palm Beach, Florida, before resigning to focus on her sculpture. She eventually transformed the Norton estate into a sculpture garden. Upon her passing in 1982, her ashes were interred in Selma.

Annie Vaughan Weaver wrote and illustrated children's books in order to earn enough money to study art in New York. Because her books are based on plantation stories, they extensively use Black dialect. Frawg. New York; Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1930.

Boochy's Wings. New York; Frederick A. Stokes, Company, 1931.

Pappy King. New York; Frederick A. Stokes, 1932.
Beecher_John_Final.png John Beecher Beecher, John
1904-1980

John Beecher was born in New York but raised in Birmingham, Alabama. Beecher spent many years working in the steel mills, which inspired him to begin writing poetry. He pursued higher education, obtaining a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Alabama and a master’s degree in English from the University of Wisconsin before engaging in graduate studies in sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Beecher's career spanned various roles, including writing for newspapers, serving in the United States Merchant Marine, running a ranch in Sonoma County, and engaging in civil rights activities in the 1960s. In 1956, Beecher and his wife established Morning Star Press, later known as Rampart Press, to promote the works of blacklisted poets. He died of lung disease in 1980.

John Beecher wrote poetry that expressed his political and social activism. He frequently discussed the rights of working class people and African Americans in his works. He also wrote nonfiction books about his experiences in the Navy during World War II and farm labor in Minnesota. And I Will Be Heard. New York; Twice a Year Press, 1940.

Here I Stand. New York; Twice a Year Press, 1941.

All Brave Sailors: The Story of the SS Booker T. Washington. New York; L.B. Fischer, 1945.

Land of the Free: A Portfolio of Poems on the State of the Union. California; Morning Star Press, 1956.

Observe the Time: An Everyday Tragedy in Verse. San Francisco; Morning Star Press, 1956.

Inquest: A Poem. San Francisco; Morning Star Press, 1957.

Just Peanuts: A Poem. San Francisco; Morning Star Press, 1957.

Moloch. San Francisco; Morning Star Press, 1957.

Poems for the People: Broadsides. San Francisco; Morning Star Press, 1957.

In Egypt Land. Arizona; Ramparts Press, 1960.

Report to the Stockholders and Other Poems 1932-1962. New York; MR Press, 1962.

Homage to a Subversive. Arizona; Ramparts Press, 1961.

Phantom City. Arizona; Ramparts Press, 1961.

A Humble Petition to the President of Harvard. Arizona; Ramparts Press, 1963.

Bestride the Narrow World. Arizona; Rampart, 1963.

Conformity Means Death. Arizona; Rampart, 1963.

On Acquiring a Cistercian Brewery. Arizona; Rampart, 1963.

Yours in the Bonds. Arizona; Rampart, 1963.

Undesirables: Poems. Landham; Gossetree Press, 1964.

To Live and Die in Dixie, and Other Poems. Birmingham; Red Mountain Editions, 1966.

Hear the Wind Blow! Poems of Protest and Prophecy. New York; International Publishers, 1968.

John Beecher Papers: 1899-1972. New Jersey; Microfilming Corporation of America, 1973.

Collected Poems, 1924-1974. New York; Macmillan, 1974.

Tomorrow is a Day: A Story of the People in Politics. Chicago; Vanguard Books, 1980.
Henderson, George_Wylie (Thumbnail).jpg George Wylie Henderson Henderson, George Wylie
1904-1965

George Wylie Henderson was born in Warriorstand, Alabama, but relocated to Wetumpka, Alabama, with his family when he was young. Later, the family moved to Tuskegee, Alabama, and Henderson pursued his education at Tuskegee Institute, where he gained proficiency in the printing trade and graduated in 1922. Henderson later moved to New York City, working as a linotype operator for the New York Daily News. Henderson's literary career commenced with the publication of his short stories in the Daily News, followed by the release of his well-received novel, Ollie Miss, in 1935. Despite facing negative reviews for his second novel, Jule, Henderson continued writing and worked on a third novel, Baby Lou and the Angel Bud, which remained unfinished when he passed away in 1965.

George Wylie Henderson wrote short stories in the literary style of the Harlem Renaissance and novels consistent with 1940s protest novels. Themes in his works include the Black experience, self-reliance, and hard work. Ollie Miss: a Novel. New York; Frederick A. Stokes, 1935.

Jule. New York; Creative Age Press, 1940.
Lytle, Andrew (Thumbnail).jpg Andrew Lytle Lytle, Andrew
1902-1995

Andrew Lytle was born in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, but also spent time in Guntersville, Alabama, while growing up. After graduating from Vanderbilt University with a bachelor’s degree in 1925, Lytle spent a year in Alabama before attending Yale University in the fall of 1926. Lytle returned to Tennessee in 1929, engaging in farming and writing. He published a biography of Nathan Bedford Forrest in 1931 and contributed to the influential Agrarian anthology I'll Take My Stand. His first novel, The Long Night, was published in 1936 and led to him receiving two Guggenheim fellowships in fiction writing. He later pursued a teaching career while continuing to write fiction and nonfiction. Lytle published his memoir, A Wake for the Living, in 1975 and passed away in 1995.

Andrew Lytle wrote short stories, novels, and nonfiction. His work was informed by his upbringing in a farming family and his association with the literary group known as the Agrarians. Themes in his works include cultural change, revenge, and family. Bedford Forrest and His Critter Company. New York; Minton, Balch and Co., 1931.

The Long Night. Indiana; Bobbs-Merrill, 1936.

At the Moon's Inn. New York; Bobbs-Merrill, 1941.

V'ardshuset M'anen; ber'attelsen om Hermando de Soto's Expedition till Florida. Stockholm; A. Sohlman, 1943.

A Name for Evil; a Novel. Indiana; Bobbs-Merrill, 1947.

The Velvet Horn. New York; McDowell, Oblensky, 1957.

A Novel, a Novella, and Four Stories. New York; McDowell, Oblensky, 1958.

A Christian University and the World; an Address for the Founder's Day 1964. Tennessee; The University of the South, 1964.

The Hero with the Private Parts; Essays. Louisiana; Louisiana State University Press, 1966.

A Wake for the Living; a Family Chronicle. New York; Crown, 1975.

Alchemy. North Carolina; Paleomon, 1979.

Reflections of a Ghost; an Agrarian View After Fifty Years. Dallas; New London Press, 1980.

From Eden to Babylon; the Social and Political Essays of Andrew Nelson Lytle. Washington, D.C.; Regnery Gateway, 1990.

Kristin: A Reading. Columbia; University of Missouri Press, 1992.
Bontemps, Arna (Thumbnail).jpg Arna Bontemps Bontemps, Arna
1902-1973

Arna Bontemps was born in Alexandria, Louisiana, but grew up in southern California. After completing his bachelor’s degree in English at Pacific Union College in 1923, he worked at the Los Angeles Post Office and wrote poetry in his free time. He moved to New York City and began teaching at Harlem Academy after one of his poems was published in The Crisis in 1924. Bontemps gained recognition for his poetry and also published his first novel God Sends Sunday. He moved to Huntsville, Alabama, to accept a teaching position at Oakwood College when Harlem Academy closed in 1931. While in Alabama, his first children’s books were published. He resigned from Oakwood College in 1934 and briefly lived in California, Chicago, and the Caribbean before returning to Chicago to attend library school at the University of Chicago. Bontemps spent the next twenty-three years as the head librarian at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. While there, he taught creative writing classes and continued his own writing. He briefly taught at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Yale University before returning to Fisk University to be a writer-in-residence in 1971. Bontemps died of a heart attack in Nashville in 1973.

Arna Bontemps wrote fiction and nonfiction books for children and adults as well as poetry. His works are known for their impact on Black literature. Some of his stories are based on his experiences in Alabama. God Sends Sunday. New York; Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1931. Rpt. New York; AMS Press, 1972. Rpt. New York; Washington Square Press, 2005.

Black Thunder. New York; Macmillan, 1936. Rpt. Boston, MA; Beacon Press, 1968. Rpt. Boston, MA; Beacon Press, 1992.

Sad-Faced Boy. Illus. Virginia Lee Burton. Boston, MA; Houghton Mifflin, 1937.

They Seek a City. Garden City, New York; Doubleday, 1945. Rpt. as Anyplace But Here. New York; Hill and Wang, 1966, and as Anyplace But Here. Columbia, MO; University of Missouri Press, 1997.

Story of the Negro. Illus. Raymond Lufkin. New York; Knopf, 1948. Rpt. 1955 and 1969.

Lonesome Boy.
Boston, MA; Houghton Mifflin, 1955. Rpt. Boston, MA; Beacon Press, 1988.

Personals.
London; P. Bremen, 1963. Rpt. in 1973.

The Old South: "A Summer Tragedy" and Other Stories of the Thirties. New York; Dodd Mead, 1973.
Goode, Viola_Liddell (Thumbnail).jpg Viola Goode Liddell Liddell, Viola Goode
1901-1998

Viola Goode Liddell was a native of Gastonburg, Alabama. After obtaining her degree from Judson College in 1922, she embarked on a teaching career and later ventured into writing, publishing short pieces in magazines like Holland’s Magazine and The Georgia Review. Along with short stories and a collection of poetry, Liddell wrote memoirs reflecting on her childhood in Gastonburg and her life in Camden, Alabama. Her second memoir, A Place of Springs, won the Alabama Library Association Nonfiction Authors Award in 1981. Liddell passed away in 1998, with her final memoir being published posthumously in 2004.

Viola Goode Liddell wrote short stories, poems, and three memoirs. Her memoirs detail life in Alabama's Black Belt and give glimpses into the South during the Great Depression and the civil rights movement. Reflections in Rhyme. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Publishing Co., 1944.

With a Southern Accent. Norman; University of Oklahoma Press, 1948.

A Place of Springs. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1979.
Fitzgerald, Zelda (Thumbnail).jpg Zelda Fitzgerald Fitzgerald, Zelda
1900-1948

Zelda Fitzgerald was a native of Montgomery, Alabama. Despite her limited interest in formal education, she graduated from Sidney Lanier High School in 1918. After graduation, Zelda met writer F. Scott Fitzgerald at a local dance, and he became one of her suitors. Zelda agreed to marry Scott after the publication of his first novel in 1920. Immersed in the vibrant literary and social milieu of New York City, they became emblematic figures of the Jazz Age. Zelda wrote several articles and short stories on flappers that were published with her husband’s name added to the byline. Zelda and Scott’s lives were marked by constant travels between Europe and the United States until Zelda’s mental health worsened after she was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1930. Despite spending most of the rest of her life in mental health facilities, Zelda continued to write and completed her novel, Save Me the Waltz. Zelda died in 1948 in a fire at Highland Hospital.

Zelda Fitzgerald wrote short stories and nonfiction in addition to her autobiographical novel Save Me the Waltz about her rocky marriage to author F. Scott Fitzgerald. Common themes of her works include the 1920s and flappers.

Save Me the Waltz. New York; Scribner, 1932.

Bits of Paradise: 21 Uncollected Stories by F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. New York; Scribner, 1973.

Scandalabra. Bloomfield Hill; Bruccoli Clark, 1980.

Collected Works of Zelda Fitzgerald. Ed. Matthew J. Bruccoli. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 1991.

The Collected Writings. New York; Maxwell MacMillan, 1991.
Warren, Lella (Thumbnail).jpg Lella Warren Warren, Lella
1899-1982

Lella Warren was born in Clayton, Alabama, but frequently moved while she was growing up. She earned a bachelor’s degree from George Washington University in 1921 and published her first novel, A Touch of Earth in 1926. She then began publishing short stories and articles in national magazines and newspapers. Inspired by her father's wishes, Warren began a trilogy set in Alabama that delved into her family's history. The first installment, Foundation Stone, garnered significant acclaim and was compared to Gone With the Wind. Although she published the second book in the trilogy and continued writing, the final installment remained unfinished and unpublished at the time of her passing in 1982.

Lella Warren wrote short stories, essays, feature stories, and novels centering on family and home. Many of her stories are based on her life or the lives of her family members, including her two Whetstone novels. A Touch of Earth. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1926.

Foundation Stone. New York; Knopf, 1940.

Whetstone Walls. New York; Appleton Century, 1952.

Family Fiction: Unpublished Narratives of Lella Warren. Birmingham; Summa Publishers, 1989.
Vines, Howell (Thumbnail).jpg Howell Vines Vines, Howell
1899-1981

Howell Vines was a native of Short Creek, Alabama, and spent time in Hueytown, Alabama, and Tuscaloosa, Alabama, while growing up. After earning a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Alabama in 1923, he earned a master’s degree from Harvard University in 1925. Vines taught at several institutions, including William M. Rice Institute (now Rice University) and the University of Richmond, before returning to Alabama, where he focused on writing. Vines wrote and published two novels and two short stories in the 1930s. Although he continued writing, he did not have any further publications before his death in 1981.

Howell Vines was a writer of local-color fiction. His stories are set in the Warrior River basin in northern Alabama where he grew up. Common themes in his writing include nature, folkways, and idiomatic speech. The Green Thicket World. Boston; Little, Brown and Company, 1934.
Childers, James_Saxon (Thumbnail).jpg James Saxon Childers Childers, James Saxon
1899-1965

James Saxon Childers grew up in Birmingham, Alabama. He served as a United States Navy pilot during World War I and then earned his bachelor’s degree at Oberlin College in 1920. He later earned a master’s degree at Oxford University while attending as a Rhodes Scholar. Childers spent the next seventeen years teaching literature and creative writing at Birmingham-Southern College while also contributing as a columnist and book reviewer for The Birmingham News. Childers published his first novel in 1926 and continued publishing numerous novels, travel books, and biographies over the years. His works were well-received by critics, particularly his travel books. Childers served as a US Air Force intelligence officer during World War II and later worked for The Atlanta Journal and the US State Department. Despite facing challenges due to his liberal views on integration, Childers remained dedicated to his writing and lecturing career until he died of cancer in the mid-1960s.

James Saxon Childers wrote novels, biographies, and travel books. He used his experiences in the South, academia, World War I, and World War II as inspiration for his fiction. His works often explore themes of racial integration and social issues. From Siam to Suez. New York; D. Appleton, 1923.

Histories or Tales of Past Times Told by Mother Goose, with Morals. S.l.; Nonesuch, 1925.

Robert McAlpine, a Biography. New York; Oxford University Press, 1925.

Hilltop in the Rain. New York; D. Appleton, 1928.

The Bookshop Mystery. New York; D. Appleton, 1930.

Through Oriental Gates. New York; D. Appleton, 1930.

God Save the Duke. New York; D. Appleton, 1933.

In the Deep South. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1936.

Sailing South American Skies. New York; Farrar, 1936.

A Novel About a White Man and a Black Man in the Deep South. New York; Farrar, 1936.

Mumbo Jumbo, Esquire. New York; D. Appleton, 1941.

Laurel and Straw. New York; D. Appleton, 1941.

Enemy Outpost. New York; D. Appleton, 1942.

Erskine Ramsay, His Life and Achievements. S.l.; Cartwright and Ewing, 1942.

War Eagles, the Story of the Eagle Squadron. New York; D. Appleton, 1943.

The Nation on the Flying Trapeze: The United States as the People of the East See Us. New York; D. McKay, 1960.

A Way Home: The Baptists Tell Their Story. Atlanta; Tupper and Love, 1963.

Joint Publications:

Tomorrow We Reap. New York; Dial, 1949.
Haardt, Sara (Thumbnail).jpg Sara Haardt Haardt, Sara
1898-1935

Sara Haardt was a native of Montgomery, Alabama. She graduated from Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1920. After briefly teaching at Margaret Booth School, Haardt returned to Goucher College to teach English. Her first short stories were published in The Reviewer in 1922. Despite battling tuberculosis throughout her life, Haardt persisted in her writing endeavors, publishing works such as her novel The Making of a Lady. Haardt’s tuberculosis led to her death in 1935. A collection of her short stories titled Southern Album was curated by Haardt’s mentor H.L. Mencken and published the year following Haardt’s death.

Sara Haardt wrote a novel, a screenplay, newspaper articles, essays, and short stories. Her work is marked by its accuracy in portraying the South and its frequent exploration of how southern customs shape the lives of women and young girls. The Love Story of an Old Maid; She Began to Love at Sixteen, but Waitedor What? Kansas; Haldeman-Julius, 1927.

The Making of a Lady. New York; Doubleday, 1931.

Southern Album. New York; Doubleday, 1936.

Southern Souvenirs: Selected Stories and Essays of Sara Haardt. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1999.
Cason, Clarence (Thumbnail).jpg Clarence Cason Cason, Clarence
1898-1935

Clarence Cason was born and raised in Alabama. He graduated from the University of Alabama in 1917 before enlisting in the United States Army during World War I. After the war, Cason worked as a journalist for several newspapers, including The New York Times. Cason earned his master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin and accepted a position teaching journalism at the University of Minnesota, during which he published a journalism style book. He eventually returned to the University of Alabama to establish the Department of Journalism and continued to write essays for national publications. He used essays he had written about the South as a starting point for his book 90° in the Shade. Cason committed suicide in 1935, just before the publication of 90 in the Shade.

Clarence Cason wrote essays and published a collection of essays. Themes in his works include race, the South, and the working class. 90 Degrees in The Shade. Connecticut; Negro Universities Press, 1970.
Sterne, Emma_Gelders (Thumbnail).png Emma Gelders Sterne Sterne, Emma Gelders
1894-1971

Emma Gelders Sterne was a native of Birmingham, Alabama. She earned a bachelor’s degree from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1916 before returning to Birmingham to campaign for women's suffrage and establish a school for delinquent children. She then lived in various cities, including New York City; Pelham, New York; and Wilton, Connecticut. After selling her first story in 1923, Sterne went on to write children’s books, historical novels, and biographies. Several of her works are set in Alabama. She continued writing until her passing in 1971.

Emma Gelders Sterne was a prolific writer of biography, historical novels, and children's books. Her children's books discussed history and biography in a way that was accessible to young readers. White Swallow. New York; Duffold & Co., 1928.

Blue Pigeons. New York; Duffold & Co., 1929.

Loud Sing Cuckoo. New York; Duffield, 1930.

Amarantha Gay, M.D. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1932.

No Surrender. New York; Duffield and Green, 1932.

Calico Ball. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1933.

Drums of Monmouth. New York; Court Book, Co., 1935.

The Reluctant Dragon; a Play in Three Acts. New York; S. French, 1935.

Far Town Road. New York; Dodd, 1937.

Miranda Was a Princess; a Story of Old Spain. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1937.

Some Plant Olive Trees. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1937.

European Summer. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1938.

The Pirate of Chatham Square, a Story of Old New York. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1939.

America Was Like This. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1941.

We Live to Be Free. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1942.

Incident in Yorkville. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1943.

Printer's Devil. New York; Aladdin Books, 1952.

A Ball for Little Bear; an Ojibway Legend. New York; Aladdin Books, 1953.

The Long Black Schooner, the Voyage of the Amistad. New York; Aladdin Books, 1953.

Watchtowers and Drums. New York; Aladdin Books, 1953.

A Ball for Little Bear; an Ojibway Legend. New York; Aladdin Books, 1953.

How Rabbit Stole Fire; a Cherokee Legend. New York; Aladdin Books, 1954.

Let the Moon Go By; a Book of Tall Tales. New York; Aladdin Books, 1955.

Mary McLeod Bethune. New York; Knopf, 1957.

Blood Brothers, Four Men of Science. New York; Knopf, 1958.

A Cap for Kathy. New York; Golden Press, 1959.

Balboa. New York; Knopf, 1960.

Junior Nurse.
New York; Golden Press, 1960.

Senior Nurse. New York; Golden Press, 1960.

The Patient in 202. New York; Golden Press, 1961.

Assignment in Alaska. New York; Golden Press, 1961.

Private Nurse. New York; Golden Press, 1962.

Search for an Island. New York; Golden Press, 1963.

Sierra Adventure. New York; Golden Press, 1964.

Courage in Crisis. New York; Golden Press, 1964.

Off-Duty Nurse New York; Golden Press, 1964.

An Affair of the Heart. New York; Golden Press, 1965.

Peace Corps Nurse. New York; Golden Press, 1965.

African Adventure. New York; Golden Press, 1965.

I have a Dream. New York; Knopf, 1965.

Benito Juarez, Builder of a Nation. New York; Knopf, 1967.

They Took Their Stand. New York; Crowell-Collier, 1968.

His Was the Voice; the Life of W. E. B. DuBois. New York; Crowell-Collier Press, 1971.

Joint Publications:

The Sea. New York; Golden Books, 1959.

King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table. New York; Golden Books, 1962.
March, William (Thumbnail).jpg William March March, William
1894-1954

William March, born William Edward Campbell, was born in Mobile, Alabama, but moved frequently while growing up due to his father’s work in the timber business. He briefly attended Valparaiso University and the University of Alabama before enlisting as a private in the United States Marine Corps at the beginning of World War I. March experienced both physical and psychological wounds while serving in France and ultimately earned three medals of bravery. After the war, March returned to Mobile and embarked on a successful career with the Waterman Steamship Company. March later settled in New York City and delved into writing as a means of personal therapy. His first novel, Company K, was published in 1933 and was followed by five other novels as well as numerous short stories. March died in 1954 shortly after the publication of his final novel, The Bad Seed.

William March wrote short stories and novels inspired by his childhood in Alabama and his war experiences in France. His stories depict Alabama as full of natural beauty but cruel, hypocritical, and divided. Company K. New York; Random House, 1933.

Come In At The Door. New York; Smith & Haas, 1934.

The Little Wife and Other Stories. New York; Smith & Haas, 1935.

The Tallons. New York; Random House, 1936.

Some Like Them Short. Cincinnati; Little Man Press, 1939.

The First Sunset. Cincinnati; Little Man Press, 1940.

The Looking Glass. Cincinnati; Little Man Press, 1943.

Trial Balance; the Collected Short Stories. New York; Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1945.

October Island. Cincinnati; Little, Brown, 1952.

The Bad Seed. New York; Rinehart, 1954.

William March's Omnibus. New York; Rinehart, 1956.

99 Fables. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1960.
Carmer, Carl (Thumbnail).jpg Carl Carmer Carmer, Carl
1893-1976

Carl Carmer was born and grew up in rural upstate New York. He completed his bachelor’s degree at Hamilton College in 1914 and his master’s degree at Harvard University the following year. After teaching English at Syracuse University and the University of Rochester and serving in World War I, Carmer moved to Alabama to teach at the University of Alabama. During this time, he embarked on a scholarly exploration of Alabama, immersing himself in its folklore and people. Carmer then transitioned to a career in journalism before deciding to focus on writing. His first book of poetry was published in 1930 and was based on his experiences in Alabama. In 1934, he published a prose book, Stars Fell on Alabama, about his experiences in Alabama, and it quickly became a bestseller. He then began publishing books about New York folklore, books about American folklore, and children’s books. Carmer died in 1976.

Carl Carmer wrote nonfiction, children's books, poetry, and novels. He frequently wrote about folklore, his native state of New York, and his experiences living in Alabama. An Outline Course in Contemporary American Poetry. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; University of Alabama, Extension Division, 1924.

French Town, a Book of Poems. New Orleans; Quarter Book Shop, 1928.

Deep South. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1930.

Listen For A Lonesome Drum. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1936.

The Hurricane's Children. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1937.

The Hudson. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1939.

Genesee Fever. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1941.

The Jesse James of the Java Sea. New York; Farrar & Rinehart, 1945.

Wildcat Furs to China. New York; Knopf, 1945.

For the Rights of Men. New York; Hinds, Hayden & Eldredge, 1947.

Eagle in the Wind. New York; Aladdin, 1948.

Dark Trees in the Wind. New York; Sloane, 1949.

Too Many Cherries. New York; Viking Press, 1949.

Hurricane Luck. New York; Aladdin, 1949.

Windfall Fiddle. New York; Knopf, 1950.

A Flag for the Fort. New York; Messner, 1952.

Rebellion at Quaker Hill: A Story of the First Rent War. Minneapolis, Minn.; Winston, 1954.

The Susquehanna. New York; Rinehart, 1955.

The Screaming Ghost & Other Stories. New York; Knopf, 1956.

The Years of Grace, 1808-1958. New York; Grace Church, 1958.

Pets at the White House. New York; Dutton, 1959.

Henry Hudson: Captain of Ice-bound Seas. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard Press, 1960.

Thomas Jefferson and the Mockingbird Motif. Macon, Ga.; Southern Press, 1964.

My Kind of Country; Favorite Writings About New York. New York; McKay, 1966.

The Farm Boy and the Angel. New York; Doubleday, 1970.

The Boy Drummer of Vincennes. New York; Harvey House, 1972.

The Pirate Hero of New Orleans. New York; Harvey House, 1975.

Joint Publications:

College English Composition. Richmond, Va.; Johnson Publishing Co, 1927.

Francis Marion; Swamp Fox of the Carolinas. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1962.

Captain Abner and Henry Q. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1965.

Mike Fink and the Big Turkey Shoot. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1965.

Tony Beaver; Griddle Skater. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1965.

Pecos Bill and the Long Lasso. Champaign, Ill.; Garrard, 1968.
Strode, Hudson (Thumbnail).jpg Hudson Strode Strode, Hudson
1892-1976

Hudson Strode was born in Cairo, Illinois, and moved several times during his childhood before settling in Demopolis, Alabama. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Alabama in 1913 and a master’s degree from Columbia University in 1914. While working as an English professor at Syracuse University, he sold his first short story to a magazine. Although he was ineligible for the draft due to being underweight, Strode arranged troop entertainments during World War I. He experienced bouts of poor health in the late 1920s-early 1930s, but he dedicated himself to writing. His writing career is marked by travel books and a well-received but sympathetic three-volume biography of Confederate president Jefferson Davis. Meanwhile, his teaching career is best remembered for the fiction writing class that he taught for twenty-five years at the University of Alabama. Strode retired in 1963 but continued writing until his death in 1976.

Hudson Strode was a writer of travel books about countries far and wide. In addition to travel books, Strode wrote a three-volume biography of Confederate president Jefferson Davis. The End of the Dance; a Play in One Act. New York; S. French, 1929.

The Story of Bermuda. New York; Random House, 1932.

The Pageant of Cuba. New York; H. Smith and R. Haas, 1934.

South by Thunderbird. New York; Random House, 1937.

Finland Forever. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1941.

Temples to the South. Great Neck, N.Y.; G. Alam Chidsey, 1941.

Timeless Mexico. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1944.

Now in Mexico. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1947.

Sweden, Model for a World. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1949.

Denmark Is a Lovely Land. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1951.

Jefferson Davis: A Biography in 3 vols. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1955-1964.

Ultimates in the Far East; Travels in the Orient and India. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1970.

The Eleventh House, Memoirs. New York; Harcourt, Brace, 1975.
Bethea, Jack (Thumbnail).jpg Jack Bethea Bethea, Jack
1892-1928

Jack Bethea was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama. He began his career as a cub reporter for The Birmingham Age-Herald while still in high school and continued working as a reporter until 1916, when he became the city editor of The Birmingham Ledger. Following the closure of the Ledger, Bethea worked at a local department store before joining The Birmingham Post as a managing editor in 1921. Alongside his journalism pursuits, Bethea also dabbled in fiction writing and was associated with the Loafers' Club, a group of Birmingham writers. His short stories and serialized novels gained recognition and were published in national magazines like Collier's. Bethea published four novels between 1924 and 1928, two of which were adapted into motion pictures. In 1928, Bethea struggled with a lingering illness and committed suicide in a downtown Birmingham hotel in July of that year.

Jack Bethea was a journalist and fiction writer. Themes in his novels include coal mining and agriculture. His works are known for their realism and southern settings. Half Gods. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1923.

Honor Bound. Boston; Houghton, 1926.

The Deep Seam. Boston; Houghton, 1927.

Cotton: A Novel. Boston; Houghton, 1928.

Bed Rock. Boston; Houghton, 1928.
Hurston, Zora_Neale (Thumbnail).jpg Zora Neale Hurston Hurston, Zora Neale
1891-1960

Zora Neale Hurston was born in Notasulga, Alabama, but was raised in Eatonville, Florida, an all-Black town. She experienced racial segregation for the first time when attending boarding school in Jacksonville, Florida. Hurston's passion for writing emerged during her time at Howard University in Washington D.C., and she published her first short story in the university’s literary magazine. She later moved to New York and became an integral part of the Harlem Renaissance, receiving recognition for her work and earning a scholarship to Barnard College, from which she earned a bachelor’s degree in 1928. Hurston's interests expanded to anthropology, leading her to conduct research in the southern United States and the Bahamas, collecting folklore material. She published in many genres, including folk stories, novels, plays, and autobiography, and she was known for her ability to tell the stories of common people. After facing false accusations of child molestation, Hurston’s reputation was tarnished, and her publisher didn’t accept any subsequent novels. Despite setbacks, Hurston continued to write and publish short stories and articles while working various jobs to support herself. She died of a heart attack in 1960.

Zora Neale Hurston wrote short stories, plays, novels, essays, articles, and even an autobiography. Her work was influenced by her interest in anthropology and her desire to preserve the cultural heritage of rural southern Black people. Jonah's Gourd Vine. New York; Lippincott, 1934.

Mules and Men. New York; Lippincott, 1935.

Their Eyes Were Watching God. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1937.

Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1938.

Voodoo Gods: An Inquiry into Native Myths and Magic in Jamaica and Haiti. London; Dent, 1939.

Moses, Man of the Mountains. New York; Lippincott, 1939.

Dust Tracks on a Road. New York; Lippincott, 1942.

Seraph on the Suwanee. New York; Scribner, 1948.

I Love Myself when I Am Laughing... And then again when I am Looking Mean and Impressive. New York Feminist Press, 1979.

The Sanctified Church: The Folklore Writings of Zora Neale Hurston. Alabama; Turtle Island Foundation, 1983.

Spunk: The Selected Stories of Zora Neale Hurston. Alabama; Turtle Island Foundation, 1985.

The Gilded Six-Bits. New York; Redpath Press, 1986.

Complete Stories. New York; HarperCollins, 1994.

Folklore, Memoirs, and Other Writings. New York; Library of America, 1995.

Novels and Stories. New York; Library of America, 1995.

Sweat. New Jersey; Rutgers University Press, 1997.

Collected Essays. New York; HarperCollins, 1998.

Joint Publications:

Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life in Three Acts. New York; Harper Perennial 1931; Rpt. 1991.
Cohen, Octavus_Roy (Thumbnail).jpg Octavus Roy Cohen Cohen, Octavus Roy
1891-1959

Octavus Roy Cohen was born and raised in Charleston, South Carolina. He began his career as an engineer after graduating from Clemson Agricultural College. However, he soon transitioned to journalism and then briefly practiced law before dedicating himself to writing full-time. Cohen's literary contributions encompassed a wide range, including short stories published in national magazines, novels, and plays performed on Broadway. He spent many years in Birmingham, Alabama, and wrote 250 short stories about African American life based on his observations. Even at the time they were published, these stories drew criticism for their racial bias. Cohen also ventured into writing motion picture scripts and radio dramas, and his work found success on television adaptations in the 1950s. He died of a stroke in 1959.

Octavus Roy Cohen wrote short stories, novels, plays, and film scripts. He wrote many stories about African Americans using dialect and humor, but they drew criticism for containing stereotypes and racial bias. He was best known for his detective stories. The Other Woman. New York; Macaulay, 1917.

Six Seconds of Darkness. New York; Grossett & Dunlap, 1918.

Polished Ebony. New York; Dodd, 1919.

The Crimson Alibi. New York; Dodd, 1919.

Come Seven. New York; Dodd, 1920.

Gray Dusk. New York; Dodd, 1920.

Highly Colored. New York; Dodd, 1921.

Assorted Chocolates. New York; Dodd, 1922.

Midnight. New York; Dodd, 1922.

Dark Days and Black Knights. New York; Dodd, 1923.

Jim Hanvey, Detective. New York; Dodd, 1923.

Sunclouds. New York; Dodd, 1924.

Damaged Good. Philadelphia; Saturday Evening Post, 1925.

The Iron Chalice. New York; Grossett & Dunlap, 1925.

Bigger and Blacker. Cincinnati; Little, 1926.

The Other Tomorrow. New York; D. Appleton, 1927.

The Outer Gate. Cincinnati; Little, 1927.

Detours. Cincinnati; Little, 1927.

Spring Tide. New York; Appleton, 1928.

Florian Slappey Goes Abroad. Cincinnati; Little, 1928.

The Light Shines Through. Cincinnati; Little, 1928.

The May Day Mystery. New York; D. Appleton, 1929.

The Backstage Mystery. New York; D. Appleton, 1930.

Epic Peters, Pullman Porter. New York; D. Appleton, 1930.

Lilies of the Alley. New York; D. Appleton, 1931.

Cameos. New York; D. Appleton, 1932.

Star of Earth. New York; D. Appleton, 1932.

Carbon Copies. New York; D. Appleton, 1932.

The Townsend Murder Mystery. New York; D. Appleton, 1933.

The Valley of Olympus. New York; D. Appleton, 1934.

Scarlet Woman. New York; D. Appleton, 1934.

Scrambled Yeggs. New York; D. Appleton, 1934.

With Benefit of Clergy. New York; D. Appleton, 1935.

Black to Nature. New York; D. Appleton, 1935.

Child of Evil. New York; D. Appleton, 1936.

I Love You Again. New York; D. Appleton, 1937.

East of Broadway. New York; D. Appleton, 1938.

Strange Honeymoon. New York; D. Appleton, 1939.

Romance in Crimson. New York; D. Appleton, 1940.

Kid Tinsel. New York; Appleton Century, 1941.

Lady in Armor. New York; D. Appleton, 1941.

Romance in the First Degree: A Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1943.

Sounds of Revelry. New York; Macmillan, 1943.

Danger in Paradise. New York; Macmillan, 1945.

Don't Ever Love Me, a Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1946.

Love Has No Alibi. New York; Macmillan, 1946.

Dangerous Lady, a Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1946.

My Love Wears Black, a Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1947.

More Beautiful Than Murder, a Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1948.

A Bullet for My Love, a Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1950.

The Corpse That Walked. New York; Fawcett, 1950.

Lost Lady. New York; Fawcett, 1951.

Borrasca. New York; Macmillan, 1953.

Love Can Be Dangerous, a Novel. New York; Macmillan, 1955.
Wood, Clement (Thumbnail).jpg Clement Wood Wood, Clement
1888-1950

Clement Wood was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, raised in Birmingham, and completed his bachelor's degree at the University of Alabama. He attended Yale University for law school and briefly practiced law in Birmingham before deciding to work as a teacher while pursuing his passion for writing poetry. His first book of poetry, Glad of Earth, was published in 1917. Over the years, Wood worked a variety of jobs to support his writing, and he branched out to other genres in addition to poetry. He continued writing until his death in 1950.

Clement Wood is remembered primarily as a poet who wrote using the dialect of Black Americans. He also wrote in other genres, including murder mysteries, biography, history, and even reference. Glad of Earth. New York; L. J. Gomme, 1917.

Mountain, a Novel. New York; E.P. Dutton & Company, 1920.

The Outline of Man's Knowledge. New York; E. P. Dutton & Company, 1925.

Poets of America. New York; E. P. Dutton & Company, 1925.
Stribling, TS (Thumbnail).jpg T.S. Stribling Stribling, T.S.
1881-1965

Thomas Sigismund Stribling, who published as T. S. Stribling, was born in Clifton, Tennessee, but spent summers near Gravelly Springs, Alabama. Stribling initially pursued a career in teaching, studying at Southern Normal College and the State Normal College (now the University of North Alabama) before teaching for a year at a public school in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. However, Stribling’s passion for writing prevailed, and he transitioned to full-time writing after brief stints in law and journalism. His early works encompassed children's stories and adventure tales, but his breakthrough came when he began publishing novels in 1917. Notably, Stribling earned a Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1933 for the second book in his renowned trilogy, which comprises of The Forge, The Store, and Unfinished Cathedral. While Stribling continued to write a mix of popular and serious novels until 1938, his later years saw him primarily focusing on publishing short stories in magazines until his retirement in 1955. Stribling died in 1965, and his autobiography, Laughing Stock, was published posthumously in 1982.

T.S. Stribling wrote novels of social realism, examining issues of race and class. He sympathized with the impoverished and mistreated. The Cruise of the Dry Dock. Chicago; Reilly & Britton Co., 1917.

Birthright.
 New York; Century and Company, 1922.

Fombombo. New York; The Century Co., 1923.

Red Sand. New York; Harcourt, 1924.

Teeaftallow. New York; Doubleday, Page, 1926.

These Bars of Flesh. New York; Doubleday, Doran, 1926.

East Is East. New York; L Harper Allen, 1928.

Bright Metal.New York; Doubleday, Doran, 1928.

Clues of the Caribbees; Being Certain Criminal Investigations of Henry Poggioli.Doubleday, N.Y.; Doran & Co., 1929.

Strange Moon. New York; Doubleday, Doran, 1929.

Backwater. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, Doran, 1930.

The Forge. London; Heinemann, 1931.

The Store. Doubleday, N.Y.; Doran & Co., 1932.

The Sound Wagon. New York; Doubleday, Doran, 1932.

Unfinished Cathedral. New York; The Literary Guild, 1934.

Best Dr Poggioli Detective Stories. New York; Dover, 1975.
Keller, Helen (Thumbnail).png Helen Keller Keller, Helen
1880-1968

Helen Keller was born and raised in Tuscumbia, Alabama. She became blind and deaf after a childhood illness, but she overcame her communication barriers with the help of her teacher, Anne Sullivan. Sullivan introduced Keller to manual sign language, enabling her to grasp the concept of symbolic representation. With Sullivan's guidance, Keller acquired the ability to speak and comprehend multiple languages, which led her to pursue higher education and obtain a bachelor’s degree from Radcliffe College in 1904. Her first and most famous book, The Story of My Life, was published in 1905 and details her first twenty-three years. Keller's personal experiences fueled her lifelong commitment to social reform, leading her to advocate for the rights and education of disabled individuals and champion causes such as women's suffrage and labor unions. Over the years, she wrote essays, speeches, articles and books for these causes. Her humanitarian contributions were recognized through numerous accolades, including the Legion of Honor and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Keller experienced a stroke in 1961 and passed away in 1968.

Helen Keller wrote nonfiction, essays, speeches, and articles about her own life as well as political and social issues. Themes in her works include overcoming challenges, religion, and social reform. The Story of My Life. New York; Doubleday, Page & Co., 1903.

Optimism; an Essay. New York; Crowell, 1903. (Reprinted as My Key of Life, Optimism and also as The Practice of Optimism.)

The World I Live In. New York; Century Co., 1908.

The Song of the Stone Wall. London; Century Co., 1910.

Out of the Dark; Essays, Letters & Addresses. New York; Doubleday, Page, 1927.

My Religion. New York; Swedenborg Foundation Inc., 1927

Midstream, My Later Life. New York; Doubleday, 1929.

Peace at Eventide. New York; Methuen, 1932.

Helen Keller in Scotland. New York; Methuen, 1933.

If I Had Three Days to See. Utah; Utah School for the Deaf, 1934.

Helen Keller's Journal, 1936-1937. New York; Doubleday, Doran, 1938.

Let Us Have Faith. New York; Doubleday, Doran, 1940.

Teacher, Anne Sullivan Macy; a Tribute by the Foster Child of Her Mind. New York; Doubleday, 1955.

The Open Door. New York; Doubleday, 1957.

Helen Keller; Her Socialist Years, Writings and Speeches. New York; International Publishers, 1967.
Johnston, Mary (Thumbnail).jpg Mary Johnston Johnston, Mary
1870-1936

Mary Johnston was a native of Buchanan, Virginia, and grew up surrounded by books due to her frequent illnesses as a child. Her family lived in Birmingham, Alabama for a few years before moving to New York, where Johnston began writing short stories. Four years later, the family moved back to Birmingham due to financial difficulties, and Johnston continued working on a novel she had begun in New York. She published her debut novel, Prisoners of Hope, in 1898, gaining moderate success. However, it was her second novel, To Have and To Hold (1900), that catapulted her to popularity, providing financial stability for her family. Johnston authored twenty more novels, championed causes such as women's suffrage and prison reform, and established herself near Germantown, Virginia. Despite declining popularity, she remained devoted to her writing until her death from cancer in 1936.

Mary Johnston was primarily a novelist who wrote about history and romance. She also wrote short stories, narrative poems, and even a play. Her works include themes like love, war, and feminism. Prisoners of Hope. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1898.

By Order of the Company. London; Constable, 1900.

Audrey. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1902.

Sir Mortimer. London; Constable, 1904.

The Goddess of Reason. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1907.

Lewis Rand. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1908.

The Reason Why. New York; National American Woman Suffrage Association, 1909.

The Long Roll. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1911.

Cease Firing. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1912.

Hagar. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1913.

The Witch. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1914.

The Fortunes of Garin. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1915.

The Wanderers. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1917.

Foes. New York; Harper & Row, 1918.

The Laird of Glenfernie. London; Constable, 1919.

Michael Forth. New York; Harper & Bros., 1919.

Sweet Rocket. New York; Harper, 1920.

Pioneers of Old South. New Haven; Yale University Press, 1921.

1492. Boston; Little Brown, 1922.

Silver Cross. Boston; Little, Brown, 1922.

Croatan. Boston; Little, Brown, 1923.

The Slave Ship. Boston; Little, Brown, 1924.

The Great Valley. Boston; Little, Brown, 1926.

Prisoners of Hope; a Tale of Colonial Virginia. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1926.

The Exile. New York; Harper & Bros., 1927.

To Have and To Hold. Boston; Houghton-Mifflin, 1928.
Fenollosa, Mary_McNeil (Thumbnail).jpg Mary McNeil Fenollosa Fenollosa, Mary McNeil
1865-1954

Mary McNeil Fenollosa was born and raised in Mobile, Alabama. After Fenollosa lost her husband at the age of 20, she began writing for publication. In 1894, Fenollosa began working as an assistant to Oriental art expert Ernest Fenollosa at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. She married Ernest Fenollosa in 1895, and they moved to Japan a couple years later. While in Japan, Fenollosa published a collection of poetry and a novel set in Mobile. After Fenollosa and her husband moved back to the United States, she wrote multiple novels set in Japan. Following her husband's passing, Fenollosa dedicated herself to editing his work and faced financial struggles, ultimately selling his art collection and her own property. Despite writing additional novels, her creative output dwindled, and she spent her later years with her children until returning to Alabama shortly before her death in 1954. Notably, several of her novels were adapted into silent films.

Mary McNeil Fenollosa was a poet and novelist who frequently wrote under the pseudonym Sidney McCall. Her works were often influenced by her experiences living in the South and Japan. She was known for creating believable and complicated characters in her novels. Out of the Nest; a Flight of Verses. Boston; Little, Brown, 1899.

Hirosige; the Artist of Mist, Snow and Rain. San Francisco; Vickery, Atkins & Torrey, 1901.

The Breath of the Gods. Boston; Little, Brown, 1905.

The Dragon Painter. Boston; Little, Brown, 1906.

Truth Dexter. Boston; Little, Brown, 1906.

Red Horse Hill. Boston; Little, Brown, 1909.

The Strange Woman. New York; Dodd, 1914.

Ariadne of Allan Water. Boston; Little, Brown, 1914.

Blossoms From a Japanese Garden. New York; Stokes, 1915.

The Stirrup Latch. Boston; Little, Brown, 1915.

Sunshine Beggars. Boston; Little, Brown, 1918.

Christopher Laird. New York; Dodd, Mead, 1919.
c7f0f5a09b9c50fb004ba9d6489e289c.jpg Martha Young Young, Martha
1862-1941

Martha Young was born near Newbern, Alabama, on her family’s plantation, but she grew up in Greensboro, Alabama. After graduating from Livingston Female Academy (now the University of West Alabama), she returned to her family home and began writing down Black dialect stories and songs. Her stories, poems, and essays were published in various newspapers and magazines, including New Orleans Times-Democrat and Cosmopolitan. Young's contributions to literature also include notable publications such as Plantation Songs for My Lady Banjo and Plantation Bird Legends. In 1903, she branched out to children’s literature and published Bessie Bell. Young engaged in public readings of her work and wrote poems on religious and sentimental subjects in the later years of her life. She passed away in 1941.

Martha Young wrote folk songs, children's stories, poetry, nonfiction essays, and poetry. Although her works sold well in the early twentieth century, they are considered racially insensitive today. Plantation Songs for My Lady's Banjo and Other Negro Lyrics and Monologues. New York; R. H. Russell, 1901.

Plantation Bird Legends. New York; R. H. Russell, 1902.

Bessie Bell. New York; Scott-Thaw Company, 1903.

Somebody's Little Girl. New York; Hinds, Noble & Eldredge, 1910.

Behind the Dark Pines. New York; D. Appleton and Company, 1912.

When We Were Wee. New York; Macmillan, 1913.

Two Little Southern Sisters and Their Garden Plays. New York; Hinds, Hayden & Eldridge, 1919.

Minute Dramas; the Kodak at the Quarter. Montgomery, Ala.; Paragon Press, 1921.
Howard_MilfordW_thumbnail.jpg Milford W. Howard Howard, Milford W.
1862-1937

Milford W. Howard was born in Georgia but moved to Arkansas at a young age. Howard passed the bar and practiced law in Alabama, but he turned to lecturing when he experienced financial setbacks. One of his lectures inspired his work If Christ Came to Congress, which aims to expose corruption. After a career in politics as a member of Congress, Howard began writing short stories and turned to giving lectures again. He practiced law before moving to California in 1919 and publishing two novels. One of his novels, The Bishop of the Ozarks, was adapted as a silent film, and Howard played the lead. He eventually established a school for children in the mountains of Alabama but faced financial difficulties, leading to the closure of the school and further setbacks. Howard passed away in 1937.

Milford W. Howard wrote nonfiction books and fiction novels. His nonfiction discusses political topics while his fiction is set in the mountains. If Christ Came to Congress. Washington, D.C.; Howard Publishing Company, 1894.

The American Plutocracy. New York; Holland Pub Co, 1895.

The Bishop of the Ozarks. Los Angeles, Calif.; Times Mirror Press, 1920.

Peggy Ware. Los Angeles; J.F. Rowny Press, 1921.

Facism, a Challenge to Democracy. New York; Fleming H. Revell Company, 1928.
Andrews_MaryRaymondShipman_thumbnail.jpg Mary Andrews Andrews, Mary Raymond Shipman
1860-1936

Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews was born in Mobile, Alabama but grew up in Lexington, Kentucky. After high school, Andrews studied at home under the guidance of her father. Later, she continued her studies under the guidance of her husband, who was a lawyer. She began publishing articles and short stories in popular magazines, especially Scribner’s Magazine. Notable works include her first book Vive L’Empereur (1902) and the highly acclaimed short story “The Perfect Tribute,” which revolves around United States President Abraham Lincoln. “The Perfect Tribute” was so popular that it was adapted for film twice and later published as a standalone volume. Andrews died in New York in 1936.

Mary Andrews wrote boys' coming-of-age stories and sentimental romantic fiction. Many of her stories are inspirational. Vive l'empereur. New York; Scribner, 1902.

A Kidnapped Colony. New York; Harper, 1903.

A Good Samaritan. New York; McClure, 1906.

The Perfect Tribute. New York; Scribner, 1906.

The Enchanted Forest, and Other Stories. New York; EP Dutton, 1909.

The Militants; Stories of Some Parsons, Soldiers, and Other Fighters in the World. New York; Scribner, 1909.

Bob and the Guides. New York; Scribner, 1906.

The Better Treasure. Indianapolis, IN; Bobbs-Merrill, 1908.

The Lifted Bandage. New York; Scribner, 1910.

The Marshal. Indianapolis, IN; Bobbs, 1912.

The Counsel Assigned. New York; Scribner, 1912.

The Courage of the Commonplace. New York; Scribner, 1912.

The Eternal Masculine; Stories of Men and Boys. New York; Scribner, 1913.

The Three Things; the Forge in Which the Soul of a Man Was Tested. Boston, MA; Little-Brown, 1915.

Old Glory. New York; Scribner, 1916.

The Eternal Feminine, and Other Stories. New York; Scribner, 1916.

Crosses of War. New York; Scribner, 1918.

Her Country. New York; Scribner, 1918.

Joy in the Morning. New York; Scribner, 1919.

His Soul Goes Marching On. New York; Scribner, 1922.

Passing the Torch. New York; Scribner, 1924.

Pontifex Maximus. New York; Scribner, 1925.

A Lost Commander; Florence Nightingale. New York; Doubleday, 1929.

The White Satin Dress. New York; Scribner, 1930.

Joint Publications:

August First. New York; Scribner, 1915.

Yellow Butterflies. New York; Scribner, 1924.
Moore, John_Trotwood (Thumbnail).jpg John Trotwood Moore Moore, John Trotwood
1858-1929

John Trotwood Moore was a native of Marion, Alabama. After teaching in Alabama for several years, he settled in Columbia, Tennessee, where he engaged in farming and livestock activities while contributing columns to Columbia Herald and, later, Clark’s Horse Review. Moore's literary career gained momentum with the publication of his first novel, A Summer Hymnal, in 1901, followed by the establishment of his magazine, Trotwood’s Monthly, in 1905. A horseback riding accident briefly paused Moore’s writing career, but he recovered and continued to publish his works. Moore served as the State Librarian for Tennessee from 1919 until his death in 1929.

John Trotwood Moore was a local-color writer and humorist. His work revolves around southern subjects and includes poems, humorous stories, "social problem" novels, and historical novels. Songs and Stories from Tennessee Cotton Mill. Chicago; J.C. Bauer, H.T. Coates Co., 1897.

Ole Mistis, and Other Songs and Stories from Tennessee. Philadelphia; John C. Winston Co., 1897.

Hearts of Hickory; a Story of Andrew Jackson and the War of 1812. Philadelphia; John C. Winston Co., 1897. Reprint in Nashville; Cokesbury Press, 1926.

A Summer Hymnal; a Romance of Tennessee. Philadelphia; H.T Coates Co., 1901.

The Bishop of Cottontown; a Story of the Southern Cotton Mill. Philadelphia; J.C. Winston Co., 1906.

The Old Cotton-Gin. Philadelphia; John C. Winston Co., 1910.

Uncle Wash; His Stories. Philadelphia; John C. Winston Co., 1910.

The Gift of the Grass; Being the Autobiography of a Famous Racing Horse. Boston; Little, Brown, 1911.

Jack Ballington, Forester. Philadelphia; John C. Winston Co., 1911.

Famous Racing Horse. Boston; Little, Brown, 1911.

The Draper Manuscripts as Relating to Tennessee. Nashville; Brandon, 1919.

Tom's Last Forage. Nashville; Cokesbury Press, 1926.

Hearts of Hickory; a Story of Andrew Jackson and the War of 1812. Nashville, Tenn.; Cokesbury Press, 1926.

Joint Publications:

Tennessee, the Volunteer State, 1769-1923. Chicago; S.J. Clarke, s.d.
Washington, Booker_T (Thumbnail).jpg Booker T. Washington Washington, Booker T.
1856-1915

Booker T. Washington, born into slavery in Virginia, experienced firsthand the challenges faced by African Americans during the Reconstruction era. His determination to pursue education led him to the Hampton Normal and Industrial Institute, where he completed his bachelor’s degree. He then became a teacher in Malden, West Virginia, and later earned a master's degree from Wayland Seminary. In 1881, Washington moved to Tuskegee, Alabama, and worked hard to establish the Tuskegee Institute, which followed the same principles as the Hampton Normal and Industrial Institute. He advocated for self-reliance, dignity of labor, and gradual progress toward racial equality, using his influential public speaking career to address these issues. He published several collections of essays and speeches during his life, but he is best remembered for his 1901 autobiography Up From Slavery. He remained a prominent spokesperson for the Black community until his passing in 1915.

Booker T. Washington was an educator, author, and orator who wrote speeches, essays, and an autobiography. A common theme in his works is the idea that Black people and white people should mutually respect each other while living and working together. His autobiography stresses that hard work and self-improvement lead to success. The Future of the American Negro. Boston; Small, Maynard & Company, 1899.

Sowing and Reaping. Boston, Mass.; LD Page & Co, 1900.

The Story of My Life and Work. Napierville, Ill.; JL Nichols & Co, 1900.

Up from Slavery; an Autobiography. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1901.

Character Building, Being Addresses Delivered on Sunday Evenings to the Students of Tuskegee Institute. New York; Haskel House, 1902.

Education of the Negro. Albany, N.Y.; JB Lyons Co, 1904.

Working with the Hands. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1904.

Putting the Most into Life. New York; Crowell, 1906.

Frederick Douglass. Philadelphia; G.W. Jacobs & Company, 1907.

The Negro in the South; His Economic Progress in Relation to His Moral and Religious Development. Philadelphia, Penn.; GW Jacobs & Co, 1907.

The Negro in Business. Boston, Mass.; Hertel, Jenkins & Co, 1907.

The Story of the Negro; Rise of the Race from Slavery. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1909.

A New Negro for a New Century. Chicago, Ill.; American Pub House, 1909.

My Larger Education. New York; Page & Company, 1911.

The Man Farthest Down. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1912.

The Story of Slavery. Chicago, Ill.; Hall and McCreary, 1913.

Selected Speeches. Garden City, N.Y.; Doubleday, 1932.

Black Belt Diamonds; Gems from the Speeches. New York; Fortune & Scott, 1969.
Peck, Samuel_Minturn (Thumbnail).jpg Samuel Minturn Peck Peck, Samuel Minturn
1854-1938

Samuel Minturn Peck was a native of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Because his father disapproved of his aspirations to be a poet, Peck secretly submitted his work to newspapers under an assumed name while growing up. Later, he completed a master’s degree in literature at the University of Alabama and subsequently obtained a medical degree from Bellevue Hospital Medical School to satisfy his father’s wishes (he never practiced medicine). In 1878, Peck began publishing under his own name, starting with his poem “The Orange Tree.” Over the years, he continued to publish poems, articles, and short stories in prominent newspapers and national magazines, which eventually earned him recognition as Alabama's first Poet Laureate from 1930 until his death in 1938.

Samuel Minturn Peck wrote short stories and poetry. Several of his poems explore rural themes, and his short stories are sketches of Alabama life. Cap and Bells. New York; White, Stokes & Allen, 1886 (and four subsequent editions).

Rings and Love Knots. New York; F. A. Stokes, 1892.

Mignon. New York; Edward Schuberth, 1893.

Fair Women of Today. New York; F. A. Stokes, 1895.

Rhymes and Roses. New York; F. A. Stokes, 1895.

Song Lyrics; All For You. Ohio; John Church Company, 1899.

Alabama Sketches. Chicago; A. C. McClurg & Co., 1902.

Maybloom and Myrtle. Boston; D. Estes & Co., 1910.

The Autumn Trail. Cedar Rapids, Iowa; The Torch Press, 1925.
Pyrnelle, Louise_Clarke (Thumbnail).jpg Louise Clark Pyrnelle Pyrnelle, Louise Clark
1850-1907

Louise Clarke Pyrnelle was born on an Alabama plantation and received her early education through private tutors. Following the Civil War, her family relocated to Selma, Alabama, and Pyrnelle continued her studies at an Episcopal school in Montgomery. She later studied elocution in New York and embarked on a tour of New England and Canada, captivating audiences with her performances of dialect stories. Returning to Alabama in the late 1870s, she worked as a tutor before getting married and traveling throughout Alabama and Florida while teaching, tutoring, and contributing to the Episcopal Church. Pyrnelle authored her first book, Diddy, Dumps, and Tot, in 1882, and it quickly became a success. After her husband's passing in 1901, she resided in Birmingham until her death in 1907. Her second book, Miss Li'l' Tweety, was published posthumously in 1917. Both books are now recognized as romanticizations of slavery despite being well-received at the time of publication.

Louise Clark Pyrnelle was a children's author who wrote short stories and novels about plantation life. Her stories use Black dialect and romanticize slavery. Diddie, Dumps, and Tot. New York; Grosset and Dunlap Publishers, 1882.

Aunt Flora Courtship and Marriage. Alabama; Confederate Publishing Co., 1906.

Miss Li'l' Tweety. New York; Harper Brothers, 1917.
Weeden, Howard (Thumbnail).jpg Maria Howard Weeden Weeden, Maria Howard
1846-1905

Maria Howard Weeden, also known as Howard Weeden, was born in Huntsville, Alabama, and received early training from portraitist William Frye. During the Civil War, her family relocated to Tuskegee after the Union army seized Huntsville. Weeden took the opportunity to pursue education at Tuskegee Female College. After the war, her family moved back to Huntsville, and Weeden wrote short stories and essays under the pen name Flake White, primarily in The Christian Observer. Weeden's artistic focus later shifted towards painting portraits of former slaves that were often accompanied by her own verses. Her work gained recognition through exhibitions and publications such as Shadows on the Wall (1898) and Bandana Ballads (1899). Weeden contracted tuberculosis and passed away in 1905.

Maria Howard Weeden was a writer of religious essays, stories, and poems often expressing nostalgia for the pre-Civil War era. Poems written in Black American dialect were composed to accompany her paintings of slaves. Her preferred medium was watercolor. Bandana Ballads. New York; Doubleday, Page & Company, 1899.

Songs of the Old South. New York; Doubleday and Page, 1900.

Old Voices. New York; Doubleday, Page & Company, 1904.
Moore, Idora_McClellan (Thumbnail).jpg Idora McClellan Moore Moore, Idora McClellan
1843-1929

Idora McClellan Moore was born on a plantation in Alabama. She received her early education from her mother before attending the Presbyterian Synodical Collegiate Female Institute and the Methodist Centenary Institute in Alabama. Moore began her writing career during her first marriage, publishing her first Betsy Hamilton sketch in the Talladega News-Reporter in 1873. After her husband's death, Moore turned to writing as a means of financial support, gaining recognition for her humorous pieces published in prominent newspapers and magazines like The Sunny South and Harper’s Weekly. Moore also began performing her works as spoken word performances across the country and continued these performances into her old age. Moore self-published a collection of her sketches in 1921 and died in 1929. A revised collection of her sketches was published posthumously in 1937.

Idora McClellan Moore used the pseudonym Betsy Hamilton to write around 275 dialect stories. These stories were mostly about poor southern white people but also included tales of slaves and freed slaves. Betsy Hamilton: Southern Character Sketches. Atlanta; The Dickert Co., 1921.

Christmas onn Old Time Plantation. New York; Random House, 1941.
Lanier, Sidney (Thumbnail).jpg Sidney Lanier Lanier, Sidney
1842-1881

Sidney Lanier was a native of Macon, Georgia. He graduated from Oglethorpe College in 1860 and then served in the Confederate Army as one of the Macon Volunteers. He became a prisoner of war and contacted tuberculosis while spending five months in a Union prison at Point Lookout, Maryland. After being released from prison in early 1865, Lanier briefly returned to Macon and then moved to Montgomery, Alabama. While in Alabama, Lanier wrote his first and only novel, Tiger-Lilies, in about three weeks. He then moved to cities like Prattville and Macon to teach or practice law while writing poetry and essays. In 1873, he moved to Baltimore, Maryland, and played flute with the Peabody Orchestra. He became well-known for his musical composition “Black Birds.” Lanier then became a lecturer at John Hopkins University before he died of tuberculosis complications in 1881. His family posthumously published collections of his poetry and essays.

Sidney Lanier was a poet, essayist, and novelist. Much of his poetry reflects the theme of nature while his novel reflects themes of war, intellectualism, and art. Tiger Lilies. New York; Hurd & Houghton and Company, 1867.

The English Novel. New York; C. Scribner's Sons, 1883.

Florida: Its Scenery, Climate, and History. Gainesville; University of Florida Press, 1973.
Cocke, Zitella (Thumbnail).jpg Zitella Cocke Cocke, Zitella
1840-1929

Zitella Cocke was born and raised in Marion, Alabama, where she displayed an early passion for poetry. After completing her education at Judson Female Institute, she embarked on a journey to Europe to study music. Returning to Alabama, she taught at Judson and published her poems in various periodicals. Over the years, she ventured to cities like Chicago and Baltimore, teaching music, writing, and engaging in translation work. Cocke authored several books, including collections of poems and short stories for children. Despite losing her eyesight in 1916, she continued to write until her passing in 1929.

Zitella Cocke wrote poems, essays, short stories, and musical compositions. Many of her poems were inspired by the South where she was born and raised. Her works include themes like nature, history, religion, society, and grief. A Doric Reed. Boston; Copeland & Day, 1895.

When Grasshoppers Hop and Other Poems. New York; H.M. Caldwell Co, 1904.

Cherokee Rose and Other Southern Poems. Boston; R.G. Badger, 1907.

Joint Publications:

Lilly's Girlhood, or Child and Woman. Philadelphia; E.S. Stuart, 1881.
Wilson_AugustaJaneEvans_thumbnail.jpg Augusta Jane Evans Wilson Wilson, Augusta Jane Evans
1835-1909

Augusta Jane Evans Wilson was born into a privileged family in Columbus, Georgia, but relocated to Mobile, Alabama, after her father’s business went bankrupt during the economic depression of the 1840s. Evans Wilson began writing to help her family financially, and she found success as a novelist. Her novels, including Beulah and Macaria, were popular and sold well. Evans Wilson continued writing and publishing novels until her passing in 1909.

Augusta Jane Evans Wilson was among only a handful of women earning a sizable income from their writing in nineteenth-century America. Her domestic novels advocated the importance of women's intellectual development, discussed religious themes and morality, and reflected her commitment to the southern cause during the Civil War. Inez, a Tale of the Alamo. New York; Harper & Brothers, 1855.

Macaria; or, Altars of Sacrifice. Richmond; West, and Johnson, 1864.

St. Elmo. New York; Grossett & Dunlap, 1866.

Vashti; or, "Until Death Do Us Part." New York; Carleton, 1869.

Beulah. New York; Carleton, 1869.

At the Mercy of Tiberius. New York; G. W. Dillingham, 1887.

Infelice. New York; G. W. Dillingham, 1889.

A Speckled Bird. New York; A. L. Burt, 1902.

Devota. New York; G. W. Dillingham, 1907.
Davis, Rebecca_Harding (Thumbnail).jpg Rebecca Harding Davis Davis, Rebecca Harding
1831-1910

Rebecca Harding Davis was born in Washington, Pennsylvania but spent part of her life in Big Spring (now Florence), Alabama. Harding Davis’s big break came in 1861 when her short story, "Life in the Iron-Mills," was published in The Atlantic Monthly. It was groundbreaking for its brutal realism and depiction of workers’ struggles. She found success publishing popular fiction in magazines like Peterson’s Magazine and literary fiction in magazines like Harper’s Magazine. Her work had a significant impact on American literature and influenced other writers, including her son, Richard Harding Davis, who became a well-known writer in his own right. Rebecca Harding Davis passed away two days after she had a stroke in 1910.

Rebecca Harding Davis was best known for writing literary short stories and novels that were early examples of realism in American literature. She also wrote essays, mysteries, and children's books. Common themes in her works include industrialism, the social role of women, race, and the working class. Waiting for The Verdict. New York; Sheldon & Company, 1868.

John Andross. New York; Orange Judd Company, 1874.

Silhouettes of American Life. New York; C. Scribner's Sons, 1892.

Bits of Gossip. Boston; Houghton, Mifflin & Company, 1904.
Barr_JohnGorman_thumbnail.png John Gorman Barr Barr, John Gorman
1823-1858

John Gorman Barr was born in Milton, North Carolina. He attended the University of Alabama, where he earned both a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts. In 1845, Barr began practicing law and writing for the Tuscaloosa Observer. When the Mexican War began, Barr recruited a company of soldiers from Alabama and served as captain from 1847-1848. After returning from Mexico, Barr continued practicing law and became editor of the Tuscaloosa Observer. Barr also wrote stories about frontier life in Alabama, and they were published nationally for several years. He died of sunstroke while en route to his appointment as U.S. Consul in Melbourne, Australia, in 1858.

John Gorman Barr wrote in the genre of Old Southwest Humor, choosing to set his stories in Alabama. His stories stand out due to many of the characters and places being inspired by real people and places. His works focus on the poor white working class and farming families. Rowdy Tales from Early Alabama: The Humor of John Gorman Barr. Alabama; University of Alabama Press, 1981.
Baldwin_JosephGlover_thumbnail.jpg Joseph Glover Baldwin Baldwin, Joseph Glover
1815-1864

Joseph Glover Baldwin was born in the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. After obtaining his license to practice law when he turned twenty-one, Baldwin decided to move to the Southwest. He practiced law briefly in DeKalb, Mississippi, before moving to Gainesville, Alabama. Although he was successful as a lawyer, he decided to enter politics, serving a two-year term in the Alabama House of Representatives. He ran for the United States Congress in 1848 but failed. Baldwin moved his family to Livingston, Alabama, in 1850, and he continued practicing law while also writing humorous sketches of characters he encountered during his legal career. His literary pursuits gained recognition when he published these sketches in a book titled The Flush Times of Alabama and Mississippi. In 1855, he published a second book, a collection of political portraits. Shortly before his second publication, Baldwin left Alabama for San Francisco, California, where he was appointed to the California Supreme Court. He died of tetanus in 1864.

Joseph Glover Baldwin wrote in the Old Southwest Humor genre. His work often focuses on the role that lawyers played in bringing the frontier to order. The Flush Times of Alabama and Mississippi: A Series of Sketches. New York; D. Appleton and Co., 1853. Rpt. Baton Rouge; Louisiana State University Press, 1987.

Party Leaders: Sketches of Thomas Jefferson, Alex'r Hamilton, Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, John Randolph, of Roanoke, Including Notices of Many Other Distinguished American Statesmen. New York; D. Appleton, 1855. Rpt. Freeport, N.Y.; Books for Libraries Press, 1972.
Hooper_JohnsonJones_thumbnail.jpg Johnson Jones Hooper Hooper, Johnson Jones
1815-1862

Johnson Jones Hooper was a native of Wilmington, North Carolina. While growing up, Hooper worked with his father in the printing industry and showed promise as a humorist by the age of fifteen with the composition of his poem “Anthony Milan's Launch.” Hooper passed the bar in 1838 and pursued a legal career in Alabama, eventually joining his brother's practice in LaFayette. Hooper’s story, “Taking the Census in Alabama,” was published in Spirit of the Times in 1843, helping Hooper reach a national audience. He continued writing humorous stories, the most famous of which included his well-known character Simon Suggs, and many of them were compiled in a book in 1845. Hooper also worked as an editor for various newspapers and held political positions, including serving as Alabama State Prosecutor. He died of tuberculosis in 1862.

Johnson Jones Hooper wrote in the genre of Old Southwestern Humor. His most famous stories were about the mischievous character Simon Suggs, who Hooper used to promote his own political beliefs. Some Adventures of Captain Simon Suggs, Late of the Tallapoosa Volunteers. Philadelphia; Carey and Hart, 1845.

A Ride with Old Kit Kuncker, and Other Sketches and Scenes of Alabama. Tuscaloosa; M.D. J. Slade, 1849.

The Widow Rugby's Husband, a Night at the Ugly Man's, and Other Tales of Alabama. Philadelphia; A. Hart, 1851.

Read and Circulate; Proceedings of the Democratic and Anti-Know-Nothing Party in Caucus, or the Guillotine at Work. Montgomery; Barret and Wimbish, 1855.

Dog and Gun; A Few Loose Chapters on Shooting. New York; C.M. Saxton & Co., 1856.

Simon Suggs' Adventures and Travels, Comprising All of the Scenes, Incidents, and Adventures of his Travels... with Widow Rugby's Husband and Twenty-six other Humorous Tales of Alabama. Philadelphia; T.B. Peterson, 1856.
Harris, George_Washington (Thumbnail).png George Washington Harris Harris, George Washington
1814-1869

George Washington Harris was born in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, but relocated to Knoxville, Tennessee, as a child to work in his stepbrother's metalworking shop. He held a variety of jobs throughout his life, including stints as a steamboat captain, a farmer, and the superintendent of a glass manufactory. In 1843, Harris began publishing short pieces in Spirit of the Times. He went on to publish short pieces in the Nashville Union & American, the Chattanooga Daily American Union, and the Knoxville Press and Messenger. During the Civil War, he spent time in Decatur, Alabama, among other cities. Harris passed away in Knoxville in 1869, leaving behind an unpublished book manuscript that disappeared and was never recovered.

George Washington Harris was an Old Southwest Humor writer. His best known character was Sut Lovingood, an Appalachian backwoods merrymaker who likes to tell tall tales. Sut Lovingood Travels with Old Abe Lincoln. Chicago; The Black Cat Press, 1937.

Sut Lovingood. New York; Grove Press, 1954.

Sut Lovingood Yarns Spun. New York; Dick & Fitzgerald, 1867.
Meek, Alexander_B (Thumbnail).png A.B. Meek Meek, A.B.
1814-1865

A.B. Meek was born in Columbia, South Carolina, but moved to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, when he was a child. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Alabama before volunteering for military service in the Seminole War in Florida. He had a long career in politics and served in state legal offices, worked as a law clerk, and held positions in the Alabama state legislature. He lived in Mobile, Alabama, for nearly twenty years during this time. Meek also edited newspapers, founded The Southron, and authored works such as “The Red Eagle,” a poem centered on the Creek War of 1813. Although he published many poems and a book on Southwestern history, Meek's ambitious endeavor to write a history of Alabama remained unpublished when he died in 1865.

A.B. Meek was a poet interested in history. His most ambitious work was a book-length narrative poem about the Creek War of 1813. Themes of his works include history, love, and nature. The Red Eagle: A Poem of the South. New York; D. Appleton & Co., 1855. Rpt. Montgomery; Paragon Press, 1914.

Romantic Passages in Southwestern History: Including Orations, Sketches, and Essays. New York, Mobile; S. H. Goetzel & Co., 1857. Rpt. Spartenburg, S.C.; Reprint Co., 1975.

Songs and Poems of the South. Mobile; S. H. Goetzel & Co., 1857.
Clemens, Jeremiah (Thumbnail).jpg Jeremiah Clemens Clemens, Jeremiah
1814-1865

Jeremiah Clemens was born in Huntsville, Alabama. He pursued a diverse and eventful career that encompassed law, politics, military service, and literature. After completing his education at the University of Alabama, he engaged in legal practice before venturing into politics, serving in the Alabama legislature and the United States Senate. Clemens's military service included participation in the Texas Revolution and the Mexican War, where he drew inspiration for his early novels. Despite his Unionist sympathies, he reluctantly supported secession while serving as a delegate to the Secession Convention in 1861. Following the Civil War, Clemens continued writing and advocating for the Union cause. He died in Huntsville in 1865.

Jeremiah Clemens wrote historical novels about events like the Civil War, the Texas Revolution, and the Mexican War. His novels were often inspired by his own experiences and were known for their realistic details. Embracing The Period of Texas Revolution. Philadelphia; J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1856.

Bernard Lile: A Historical Romance. Embracing the Periods of the Texas Revolution. And the Mexican War. Philadelphia; J.B. Lippincott & Co, 1856.

Mustang Gray, a Romance. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1858. 

The Rivals: A Tale of the Times of Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton. Philadelphia; J.B. Lippincott & Co, 1860.

Tobias Wilson: A Tale of the Great Rebellion. Philadelphia; J.B. Lippincott & Co, 1865.
LeVert, Octavia_Walton (Thumbnail).jpg Octavia Walton Le Vert Le Vert, Octavia Walton
1811-1877

Octavia Walton Le Vert was born and raised in Georgia but moved to Pensacola, Florida, with her family in 1821. In 1833, she made her social debut in Washington, D.C. Le Vert settled in Mobile, Alabama, in 1835, marrying a local doctor and becoming a prominent hostess. Le Vert made two European trips in the 1850s that inspired her to compile her letters and journal entries into Souvenirs of Travel in 1857. Despite her opposition to Alabama's secession, Le Vert remained in Mobile throughout the Civil War, experiencing isolation from society due to her associations with Union officers. After the war, she visited friends in the North before ultimately settling in Georgia, where she spent her remaining years and pursued public lecturing. Le Vert passed away in Georgia in 1877.

Octavia Walton Le Vert was a famous socialite and writer in the 19th century. Her most popular work is a two-volume description of her travels in Europe. Souvenirs of Travel. New York; S.H. Goetzel and Co., 1857.
HETaliaferrothumbnail.jpg H.E. Taliaferro Taliaferro, H.E.
1811-1875

H.E. Taliaferro, pronounced "Tolliver," was a native of western North Carolina. As a young man, he relocated to Roane County, Tennessee, where he learned the tanning trade from his older brothers. Feeling a calling to become a preacher, Taliaferro studied at Madisonville Academy in Tennessee before settling in Talladega, Alabama, in 1835. There, he supported himself through farming and tanning while preaching at local churches. Taliaferro later moved to Tuskegee, Alabama, where he became an editor and writer for the South Western Baptist. While living in Tuskegee, Taliaferro published two literary works, a religious tract titled The Grace of God Magnified and a book of humorous sketches titled Fisher's River. Following the Civil War, Taliaferro briefly worked with local Black Baptists before returning to Tennessee, where he passed away in 1875.

H.E. Taliaferro wrote humorous sketches that depicted characters and scenes from Alabama and North Carolina. Unlike other writers of Old Southwest Humor, Taliaferro used the double-frame technique to establish a sympathetic relationship between the tale teller and the audience.

The Grace of God Magnified. Charleston; Southern Baptist Society Publication, 1857.

Fisher's River Scene and Characters. New York; Harper & Brothers, 1859.
Gosse, Philip_Henry (Thumbnail).jpg Philip Henry Gosse Gosse, Philip Henry
1810-1888

Philip Henry Gosse was born in Worcester, England, but raised in Poole. He demonstrated an early aptitude for drawing under the influence of his father, who was a painter. Despite limited formal education, he delved into extensive reading, borrowing books from acquaintances to broaden his knowledge. In 1827, Gosse moved to Newfoundland, Canada, where he immersed himself in the study of natural history, joined book and debating societies, and embraced Methodism. Gosse later moved to Alabama and taught at Pleasant Hill while studying local natural history, but he left after eight months due to heat, humidity, and his discomfort with slavery. Gosse then settled in London, teaching, writing scientific articles, and publishing books on natural history. His works explore diverse subjects, including Canadian and Jamaican natural history, marine biology, and the establishment of home aquariums. In 1855, his book Letters From Alabama was published serially and discusses Alabama’s plants, animals, and culture. Gosse's religious convictions prompted his attempt to reconcile biblical creationism with scientific discoveries in his controversial 1857 book Omphalos. Despite criticism, he continued to publish and teach until his death in 1888.

Philip Henry Gosse wrote scientific and religious articles as well as books about nature. He frequently illustrated his books with sketches and watercolor paintings. The Canadian Naturalist: A Series of Conversations on the Natural History of Lower Canada. London; J. van Voorst, 1840. Rpt. Toronto; Coles Pub. Co., 1971.

The Ocean. London; Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1845. Rpt. Philadelphia; Parry & McMillan, 1856.

The Birds of Jamaica. London; J. van Voorst, 1847.

Natural History: Birds. London; The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1849.

A Naturalist's Sojourn in Jamaica. London; Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1851.

The Aquarium: An Unveiling of the Wonders of the Deep Sea. London; J. van Voorst, 1854.

Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie the Geological Knot. London; J. van Voorst, 1857. Rpt. Woodbridge, Conn.; Ox Bow Press, 1998. Rpt. London; Routledge, 2003.

Letters from Alabama (U. S.): Chiefly Relating to Natural History. London; Morgan and Chase, 1859. Rpt. Mountain Brook, Ala.; Overbrook Press, 1983. Rpt. Tuscaloosa; University of Alabama Press, 1993.

Evenings at the Microscope: Or, Researches Among the Minuter Organs and Forms of Animal Life. London; Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1859. Rpt. New York; D. Appleton and Company, 1896. Rpt. New York; P.F. Collier, 1901.

Ingraham, J_H (Thumbnail).jpg J.H. Ingraham Ingraham, J.H.
1809-1860

J.H. Ingraham was born and raised in Maine. He set sail for New Orleans in 1830 and then traveled upriver to Mississippi, chronicling his experiences in a series of letters published in the Natchez Courier. These letters were later compiled into the successful book The South-West. Ingraham established himself as a popular novelist, producing several successful works, but financial difficulties led to bankruptcy in 1842. To make more money, Ingraham began publishing serial novels in popular magazines, producing over seventy-five novels in six years. Ingraham became an Episcopal minister in 1847 and began engaging in prison ministry and serving as a parish priest in various locations, including Mobile, Alabama. Ingraham's literary accomplishments continued with the publication of the bestselling novel The Prince of the House of David. He remained committed to his writing and religious duties until he died of an accidental gunshot wound in 1860.

J.H. Ingraham wrote short stories and novels. His works often retold Bible stories or told stories of adventure and travel. The Pirate of The Gulf. New York; Harper & Brothers, 1836.

The Dancing Feather. Boston; The Yankee's Office, 1844.

Paul Perril, The Merchant's Son. Boston; Williams & Brothers, 1847.

The Sunny South. Philadelphia; G.G. Evans Publishers, 1860.

The Throne of David. Boston; Little, Brown, 1899.

The Prince of The House of David. Boston; Little, Brown, 1899.
Hentz, Caroline_Lee (Thumbnail).jpg Caroline Lee Hentz Hentz, Caroline Lee
1800-1856

Caroline Lee Hentz was a native of Lancaster, Massachusetts. She demonstrated her talent for writing at a young age, crafting plays during her early adolescence. By the time she was seventeen years old, she was a teacher and was known locally for her poems and stories. She married Nicholas Hentz when she was twenty-four years old, and the couple resided in various locations as Nicholas pursued his career in teaching and academia. While living in Covington, Kentucky, Caroline wrote the play De Lara: or, The Moorish Bride, winning a contest but receiving only partial compensation. Caroline continued writing, publishing novels, short stories, and articles. The couple moved to various cities in Alabama, including Florence, Tuscaloosa, and Tuskegee, so Nicholas could further his career in teaching and academia while Caroline continued writing. Her writings gained popularity, with her books becoming bestsellers of the era. She passed away in Florida in 1856, and her children published additional collections of her short stories posthumously.

Caroline Lee Hentz was best known for writing short stories and novels, but she also wrote plays and poetry. She was Alabama's first best-selling writer and helped popularize women's domestic fiction. Themes in her writing include male jealousy, love, and marriage. Lovell's Folly. Cincinnati, Ohio; Hubbard and Edmands, 1833.

Aunt Patty's Scrap Bag. Philadelphia; Carey and Hart, 1846.

Ugly Effie, or The Neglected One and the Pet Beauty. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1850.

The Mob Cap. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1852.

Eoline: or, Magnolia Vale. Philadelphia; T.B. Peterson, 1852.

The Victim of Excitement. Philadelphia, Penn.; A. Hart, 1853.

Wild Jack; or, The Stolen Child, and Other Stories. Philadelphia, Penn.; A. Hart, 1853.

Linda; or, The Young Pilot of the Belle Creole: A Tale of Southern Life. Philadelphia; A. Hart, 1853.

Helen and Arthur; or, Miss Thusa's Spinning-Wheel. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1853.

The Hermit of Rockrest. Sl; sn, 1853.

The Planter's Northern Bride. Philadelphia; A. Hart, 1854.

Marcus Warland, or, The Long Moss Spring: A Tale of the South. London; Nelson, 1854.

Robert Graham; A Sequel to Linda. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1855.

The Banished Son, and other Stories of the Heart. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1856.

Courtship and Marriage, or The Joys and Sorrows of an American Life. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1856.

Ernest Linwood; or, The Inner Life of the Author. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1856.

Love after Marriage; and Other Stories. Philadelphia, Penn.; TB Peterson & Bros, 1857.

Rena; or, The Snow Bird. Philadelphia; T.B. Peterson & Brothers, 1869.
Royall, Anne (Thumbnail).jpg Anne Royall Royall, Anne
1769-1854

Anne Royall was a native of Baltimore who moved to Pennsylvania and Virginia while growing up. She married a Revolutionary War major in 1797. After her husband’s death in 1812, Royall spent time traveling in Alabama and lived there for several years. When she began experiencing financial hardship, Royall decided to explore the United States and write travel books such as Sketches of History, Life, and Manners in the United States. Royall later settled in Washington, D.C., and published newspapers that shed light on government inefficiencies and corruption. She passed away in 1854.

Anne Royall wrote travel books based on her personal experiences. These books provide a snapshot of what American life looked like in the early 19th century. Sketches of History, Life, and Manners in the United States. New Haven; Author, nd.

The Tennessean.
New Haven; Author, 1827.

The Black Book: or, a continuation of travels in the United States
Washington, D.C.; Author, 1828.

Letters from Alabama on various subjects: to which is added, an appendix, containing remarks on sundry member of the 20th & 21st Congress. Washington, D.C.; Author, 1830.

Mrs. Royall's Southern Tour, or second series of the Black Book. Washington, D.C.; Author, 1830-1831.

The Widow of Calcutta; the half-caste daughter; and other sketches. London; D.N. Carvalho, 1841.
Bartram_William_thumbnail.jpg William Bartram Bartram, William
1739-1823

William Bartram was born near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the son of renowned botanist John Bartram. He spent four years exploring the Southeast and looking for plant specimens after persuading one of his father’s contacts in England to fund his expedition. The story of his expedition, Travels, was published fourteen years after his return and sold well in Europe. He declined offers to become a botany professor at a college that later became known as the University of Pennsylvania and to join the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Bartram died in 1823 in his garden.

William Bartram wrote a travel book that tells of his experience journeying through southeastern North America during the Revolutionary War era. His book includes detailed nature imagery and descriptions of the Indigenous people he met. The Travels of William Bartram. New York; Dover Publications, 1928.