Douglas Thayer

Douglas Thayer
File:DouglasThayer.jpg

Douglas H. Thayer (born April 19th, 1929) is considered one of the foremost fiction writers exploring contemporary Mormon life. He has been called the “Mormon Hemingway” for his straightforward style and powerful prose.[1] Growing up in Provo, Utah, Thayer spent his boyhood largely running free and hunting, fishing, and hiking in the surrounding Wasatch Mountains. He dropped out of high school in 1946 to join the U.S. Army, serving in Germany. He later returned to Germany for 30 months as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Thayer’s early work experience included helper on a uranium drill rig, construction laborer, railroad section hand, janitor, restaurant dishwasher, insurance salesman, and seasonal ranger in Yellowstone National Park. After graduating from Brigham Young University (BYU) with a bachelor’s degree in English, Thayer applied to law school, but then decided not to attend and started a doctorate in American literature at Stanford. Finding that he had little interest in research, he left the program after finishing a master’s degree.

Returning to Provo from Stanford, Thayer taught briefly in the BYU English Department, considered studying to be a clinical psychologist, and then started a doctorate in American studies at the University of Maryland. However, still not liking research, he decided that what he really wanted to do was write short stories and novels. He transferred to the University of Iowa, and finished an MFA in fiction writing.

After completing the MFA, Thayer returned to BYU, where as of 2010-2011 he is in his fifty-third year teaching fiction writing and other classes.[2] At BYU he has been Coordinator of Composition, Director of Creative Writing, and Associate Chair in the English Department and Associate Dean of the College of Humanities.

Thayer is perhaps best known for his coming-of-age stories. He has been called the “finest chronicler of the Mormon youth in the culture.” His first collection of stories, Under the Cottonwoods and Other Mormon Stories (1977), is considered a Mormon classic. [3] His other work includes a second collection of short stories, Mr. Wahlquist in Yellowstone (1989); three novels, Summer Fire (1983), The Conversion of Jeff Williams (2003), The Tree House (2009) (called by one critic “the best Mormon novel to date”[4] ); and a memoir, Hooligan: A Mormon Boyhood (2007). Thayer has a new collection of short stories, Brother Melrose and Other Mormon Stories, out to a publisher and is working on two new novels.

In his work Thayer treats such topics as pride, grace, redemption, war, hunting and fishing, perfection, materialism, and religious conversion. His prizes and awards for his work include DIALOGUE prizes for the short story and essay, the P.A. Christensen award, the Association for Mormon Letters Prize in the Novel, the Karl G. Maeser Creative Arts Award, the Utah Institute of Fine Arts Award in the Short Story, and the 2008 Smith-Pettit Foundation Award for Outstanding Contribution to Mormon Letters.

In 1974 Thayer married Donlu DeWitt. Donlu holds bachelor’s, master’s, and law degrees from Brigham Young University and has taught writing in the BYU English Department and Honors Program. A member of the Utah State Bar, she is a freelance writer/editor and a certified mediator with specialized training in family mediation and high-risk victim/offender dialogue. Beginning in mid 2009 Donlu has worked with websites, newsletters, and other publications for the International Center for Law and Religion Studies at Brigham Young University’s J. Reuben Clark Law School. Doug and Donlu have six children, six children-in-law, and (as of June 2010) fifteen grandchildren.

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