- Mark Powell (novelist)
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Mark Powell (born 1976) is an American novelist. He is the author of the novels Blood Kin and Prodigals (University of Tennessee Press 2006 and 2002), and has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Breadloaf Writers' Conference. He was educated at The Citadel, The University of South Carolina, and Yale Divinity School. He teaches in the English Department at Stetson University in DeLand, Florida. He repeatedly serves as the fiction workshop leader for the Hindman Settlement School's Appalachian Writers Workshop and the Mountain Heritage Literary Festival at Lincoln Memorial University. Powell's work marks him as an emerging writer with interests in the Appalachian region but with a far wider appeal, similar to other writers like Pamela Duncan, Silas House, Maurice Manning and Ron Rash.
Contents
Novels
Prodigals
Fifteen year old Ernest Cobb has fled his South Carolina home after the death of his girlfriend. They both feared she was pregnant and while he's innocent of her murder, he's terrified of facing his father's wrath.
In the late summer of 1944, making his way northward to Asheville through the Blue Ridge Mountains, Ernest meets fellow travelers—drifters, veterans, and outsiders—who are willing to help him. An aging hermit and woodsman, once a glassblower, rescues and revives Ernest after a particularly chilly evening.
Upon his arrival in Asheville, he finds work as a dishwasher, takes shelter in a dreary boardinghouse, and soon becomes involved with a new girlfriend. When their relationship ends, Ernest decides to accompany his friend, June Bug, to the logging camps.
Told in a minimalist style, Prodigals is a novel about Ernest's loss of innocence as well as America's loss of innocence after World War II. Using the American landscape of small towns and logging camps as touchstones, Prodigals focuses on the subculture of transients and the loneliness driving them.[1]
Blood Kin
Blood Kin received the Peter Taylor Prize for the Novel in 2005, awarded annually by the Knoxville Writer's Guild and the University of Tennessee.
References
- ^ Kingsbury, Pam (2003). "Prodigals". Southern Scribe web site. http://www.southernscribe.com/reviews/general_fiction/prodigals.htm. Retrieved 7 April 2009.
External links
Categories:- American novelists
- Living people
- 1976 births
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