Signposts in a Stange Land by Walker Percy

Image

Percy, Walker_Signposts in a Strange Land_1991.jpg

Book Title

Signposts in a Stange Land by Walker Percy

Author

Walker Percy

Lifespan

1916-1990

Author Biography

Walker Percy, born into a wealthy family in Birmingham, Alabama, faced personal tragedies early in life, including his father's suicide and the death of his mother in a car accident. He found refuge with his cousin, William Alexander Percy, an author, who became his guardian along with his two younger brothers. Despite initially pursuing medicine, Percy's battle with tuberculosis led him to explore his interests in literature, philosophy, and Roman Catholicism. Settling in Covington, Louisiana, he wrote essays on philosophy and semiotics, but it was his third novel, The Moviegoer, set in New Orleans, that garnered critical acclaim and won the National Book Award in 1961. Percy continued to write and publish novels and nonfiction, receiving accolades such as the Jefferson Lecture at the National Endowment for the Humanities in 1989. His contributions earned him membership in esteemed institutions like the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Institute of Arts and Letters.

Publisher

Alabama Authors of the 19th & 20th Centuries, edited by Beverley Park Rilett, http://AlabamaAuthors.org

Publication Date

1991

Original Publication

Signposts in a Stange Land. New York; Farrar, 1991.

Collection

Citation

Percy, Walker, “Signposts in a Stange Land by Walker Percy,” Alabama Authors of the 19th & 20th Centuries, accessed October 5, 2024, https://alabamaauthors.org/items/show/8731.