Percival everett books in order
Percival Everett
American writer and professor (born )
Percival Leonard Everett II (born December 22, )[1] is an American writer[2] and Distinguished Professor of English at the University of Southern California. He has described himself as "pathologically ironic"[3] and has played around with numerous genres such as western fiction, mysteries, thrillers, satire and philosophical fiction.[4] His books are often satirical, aimed at exploring race and identity issues in the United States.
He is best known for his novels Erasure (), I Am Not Sidney Poitier (), and The Trees (), which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. His novel James, also a finalist for the Booker Prize, won the Kirkus Prize and the National Book Award for Fiction.
Erasure was adapted as the film American Fiction (), written and directed by Cord Jefferson, starring Jeffrey Wright, Sterling K.
Brown, and Leslie Uggams.
Personal life and education
Percival L. Everett, named after his father, was born in Fort Gordon, Georgia, where his father, Percival Leonard Everett, was a sergeant in the U.S. Army. His mother was Dorothy (née Stinson) Everett. When the younger Everett was still an infant, the family moved to Columbia, South Carolina, where he lived through high school.
He has a sister, Denise Everett, a physician in Raleigh, NC.[5] His father became a dentist and his parents continued to live in South Carolina. The younger Everett eventually moved to the American West.[5]
Everett earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from the University of Miami.[6] He studied a broad variety of topics including biochemistry and mathematical logic.[7] In , he earned an master's degree in fiction from Brown University.[8]
Everett now lives in Los Angeles, California, with his wife, the novelist Danzy Senna, and their two children.[9][10]
Everett's great-grandmother was at one point enslaved.[11]
Literary career
While completing his M.A., Everett wrote his first novel, Suder ().
His lead character was Craig Suder, a Seattle Mariners third baseman in a major league slump, both on and off the field.[12]
Everett's second novel, Walk Me to the Distance (), features veteran David Larson after his return from Vietnam. Larson becomes involved in a search for the developmentally disabled son of a sheep rancher in Slut's Whole, Wyoming.
The novel was later adapted, with an altered plot, as an ABC-TV movie titled Follow Your Heart.[12][13] Everett disowned this adaptation, stating "I never saw it. I read the script, and I didn’t like it. The changes that they made were so grotesque, there was no way to embrace that at all."[14]
Cutting Lisa (; re-issued ) begins with John Livesey meeting a man who has performed a Caesarean section.
This prompts the protagonist to evaluate his relationships.[15]
In , Everett published The Weather and Women Treat Me Fair: Stories, a collection of short stories set mostly in the contemporary western United States.
In , Everett published two books re-fashioning Greek myths: Zulus, which combines the grotesque and the apocalypse; and For Her Dark Skin, a new version of Medea by the Greek playwright Euripides.[12]
Switching genres, Everett next wrote a children's book, The One That Got Away ().
This illustrated book for young readers follows three cowboys as they attempt to corral "ones", the mischievous numerals.[16]
Returning to novels, Everett published his first book-length western, God's Country, in In this novel, Curt Marder and his black tracker Bubba search "God's country" for Marder's wife, who has been kidnapped by bandits.
Marder is not sure whether he wants to find her. The book is a parody of westerns and the politics of race and gender. It includes a cross-dressing George Armstrong Custer.[12]
In , Everett published two books: Watershed has a contemporary western setting, in which the loner hydrologist Robert Hawkes meets a Native American "small person", who helps him come to terms with the inter-relation of people.
That year, Everett also published his second collection of stories, Big Picture.[12]
In Frenzy (), Everett returned to Greek mythology. Vlepo, Dionysos's assistant, is forced to undergo a "frenzy" of odd activities, including becoming lice and bedroom curtains at different times during the story, which he narrates.
These events occur so that he can explain these experiences to Dionysos, the demi-god.[12]
Glyph () is the story within a story of Ralph, a baby who chooses not to speak but has extraordinary muscle control and an IQ nearing He writes notes to his mother on a variety of literary topics based on books she supplies.
Ralph is kidnapped several times by parties trying to exploit his special skills. His odyssey (as "written" by four-year-old Ralph) teaches him more about love than intellect.[17]
Grand Canyon, Inc. () is Everett's first novella. In it, Rhino Tanner attempts to tame Mother Nature with a commercialization of the Grand Canyon.
In , Everett also published his satirical novel Erasure, in which he portrays how the publishing industry pigeon-holes African-American writers. The novel, a metafictional piece, revolves around the main character's decision to write an outrageous novella, based among the urban poor and dissolute, titled My Pafology. The writer renames it as Fuck, wanting to push the edge of acceptability and influenced by what he calls ghetto fiction, such as Richard Wright's Native Son () and Sapphire's novel Push ().[18]
A History of the African-American People (proposed) by Strom Thurmond, as told to Percival Everett and James Kincaid (), is an epistolary novel that chronicles the characters Percival Everett and James Kincaid as they work with US Senator Strom Thurmond (R-SC) (occasionally) and his aide's crazy assistant, Barton Wilkes.
The latter orders the authors around even as he stalks them.[19]
Also in , Everett released a third collection of short stories, Damned If I Do: Stories,[20] as well as the novel American Desert. In American Desert, Ted Street plans to drown himself in the ocean but is killed in a traffic accident on the way there.
Three days later, Street suddenly sits up in his casket at the funeral, although his head is severed and he lacks a beating heart. Throughout the rest of the novel, Street undergoes an odyssey of self-discovery about what being alive really means, exploring religion, revelation, faith, zealotry, love, family, media sensationalism, and death.[21]
Wounded: A Novel () tells the story of John Hunt, a horse trainer confronted with hate crimes against a homosexual and a Native American.
Hunt avoids getting mixed up in the political nature of these crimes, taking action only when he is forced to do so.[22]
Everett's collection of poetry, re:f (gesture), features one of his paintings on the front cover.
Biography percival everett Book Club Giveaway! Half an Inch of Water 4. Archived from the original on March 20, Premio Gregor von Rezzori.His poetry book, Swimming Swimmers Swimming, was published by Red Hen Press.
The Water Cure () is a novel about Ishmael Kidder, who has had a successful career as a romance novelist until the death of his daughter, when his life takes a dark turn. In a remote cabin in New Mexico, Kidder has imprisoned a man he believes to be his daughter's killer.
The book's title refers to one of the torture techniques Kidder uses on the man, namely waterboarding.[23]
In , Graywolf Press released I Am Not Sidney Poitier. The protagonist, named Not Sidney Poitier, referencing a physical resemblance to the famous actor, meets challenges relating to identity and racial segregation across North America.
He faces similar challenges in identity construction in relation to his adopted white father, Ted Turner.[24]
Assumption: A Novel () is a triptych of stories with some characters who have been in earlier Everett stories. The story "Big" returns to the character of Ogden Walker, deputy sheriff of a small New Mexico town.
Percival everett interview He dresses it up in his own way and it comes out an original. Grand Canyon, Inc. December 19, Project Muse.He is on the trail of an old woman's murderer. But at the crime scene, his are the only footprints leading up to and away from her door. As other cases pile up, Ogden gives chase and soon finds himself on the seamier side of Denver, in a hippie commune.
In , Graywolf Press published Percival Everett by Virgil Russell: A Novel,[25] a novel in which a man visits his father in a nursing home, where his father appears to be writing a novel from the point of view of his son.
Eight years later, the same press published The Trees, a satirical novel about historic and contemporary lynchings in Mississippi, the South and across the US. (It was published in the UK by Influx Press). It won the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.[26]
Dr. No, published by Graywolf Press in , won the PEN/Jean Stein Book Award and was named a finalist for the National Book Critics award for fiction.[27]
Everett received a Windham Campbell Prize for fiction.[28]
In , the film American Fiction was released, with a screenplay adapted by its director Cord Jefferson from Everett's novel Erasure.
Among other awards, American Fiction won Best Adapted Screenplay at the 96th Academy Awards.[29]
James,[30] published by Doubleday in , is a re-imagining of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of the runaway slave character Jim.[31] Everett humanizes the character, who goes by James, re-inventing him as a wise and literate man, who has conversations with enlightenment philosophers in his dreams and teaches other enslaved people to read.
James and the other black characters in the book purposefully hide their literacy and wisdom from the white characters who will undoubtedly feel threatened by educated blacks and further punish them. Although opposed to book banning, Everett commented that he hoped his re-imagined version would get banned "only because I like irritating those people who do not think and read".[3]James was longlisted for the Booker Prize[32] and chosen for the Booker Prize shortlist.[33] The novel won the Kirkus Prize for Fiction[34] and the National Book Award for Fiction.[35]
Bibliography
Novels
- Suder (Viking Books, )
- Walk Me to the Distance (Clarion Books, )
- Cutting Lisa (Ticknor & Fields, )
- Zulus (The Permanent Press, )
- For Her Dark Skin (Owl Creek Press, )
- God's Country (Faber & Faber, )
- Watershed (Graywolf Press, )
- The Body of Martin Aguilera (Owl Creek Press, )
- Frenzy (Graywolf Press, )
- Glyph (Graywolf Press, )
- Grand Canyon, Inc. (Versus Press, )
- Erasure (University Press of New England, )
- A History of the African-American People (proposed) by Strom Thurmond, as told to Percival Everett and James Kincaid (with James Kincaid) (Akashic Books, )
- American Desert (Hyperion Books, )
- Wounded (Graywolf Press, )
- The Water Cure (Graywolf Press, )
- I Am Not Sidney Poitier (Graywolf Press, )
- Assumption (Graywolf Press, )
- Percival Everett by Virgil Russell (Graywolf Press, )
- So Much Blue (Graywolf Press, )
- Telephone (Graywolf Press, )
- The Trees (Graywolf Press, ; UK: Influx Press)
- Dr.
No (Graywolf Press, )
- James (Doubleday Publishers, )
Short stories
- The Weather and Women Treat Me Fair: Stories (August House Publishers, Inc., )
- Big Picture: Stories (Graywolf Press, )
- Damned If I Do: Stories (Graywolf Press, )
- Half an Inch of Water (Graywolf Press, )
Poetry
- re:f (gesture) (Red Hen Press, ), a collection of poetry
- Abstraktion und Einfühlung (with Chris Abani) (Akashic Books, ), a collection of poetry
- Swimming Swimmers Swimming (Red Hen Press, ), a collection of poetry
- There Are No Names for Red (a collaboration with Chris Abani; paintings by Percival Everett) (Red Hen Press, ), a collection of poetry
- Trout's Lie (Red Hen Press, ), a collection of poetry
- The Book of Training by Colonel Hap Thompson of Roanoke, VA, Annotated From the Library of John C.
Calhoun (Red Hen Press, )
- Sonnets for a Missing Key (Red Hen Press, ), a collection of poetry
Children's literature
- The One That Got Away (with Dirk Zimmer) (Clarion Books, ), a children's book
Contributions
- My California: Journeys by Great Writers (Angel City Press, )
- Everett's introduction was added to the paperback edition of The Jefferson Bible.
As guest editor
Awards and honors
Everett's stories have been included in the Pushcart Prize Anthology and Best American Short Stories.
Everett received an honorary doctorate from the College of Santa Fe in In , he received a Guggenheim Fellowship in Fiction, as well as the Phi Kappa Phi Presidential Medallion from the University of Southern California.
In , Everett was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,[36] and in he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[37]
References
- ^Bader, Philip (May 14, ). African-American Writers. Infobase Publishing.
p. ISBN.
- ^Cowles, Gregory (September 18, ). "Fiction Chronicle". The New York Times. p. Archived from the original on December 14, Retrieved June 11,
- ^ abRazzall, Katie (April 9, ). "Percival Everett: Why I rewrote Huckleberry Finn to give slave Jim a voice".
BBC News.
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^Berry, Lorraine (November 8, ). "Meet Percival Everett: 5 novels that showcase the L.A. writer's enigmatic style". LA Times.: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
- ^ abBerry, Lorraine (November 8, ).
"Meet Percival Everett: 5 novels that showcase the L.A. writer's enigmatic style". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on November 20, Retrieved November 20,
- ^Mernit, Judith Lewis (September 16, ). "What do you know?". High Country News. Archived from the original on December 27, Retrieved December 27,
- ^Makari, George (August 7, ).
"A Different Language: A Conversation with Percival Everett". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved December 27,
- ^"Percival Everett". USC Dornsife. Retrieved December 27,
- ^Rath, Arun (September 20, ), "For Prolific Author Percival Everett, The Wilderness Is A Place Of Clarity"Archived May 2, , at the Wayback Machine, All Things Considered, NPR.
- ^Lucas, Julian (September 20, ).
"Percival Everett's Deadly Serious Comedy". The New Yorker. ISSNX. Archived from the original on March 20, Retrieved November 20,
- ^Razzall, Katie (April 9, ). "Percival Everett: Why I rewrote Huckleberry Finn to give slave Jim a voice". BBC.
- ^ abcdef"Percival L.
Everett", The University of South ed December 10, , at the Wayback Machine
- ^"Cynthia Whitcomb website". Archived from the original on August 14, Retrieved September 28,
- ^Shariatmadari, David (April 6, ). "'I'd love a scathing review': novelist Percival Everett on American Fiction and rewriting Huckleberry Finn".
The Guardian.
- ^"Cutting Lisa (Voices of the South)". Archived from the original on February 20, Retrieved September 8,
- ^Percival Everett, The One That Got AwayArchived September 22, , at the Wayback Machine, Emerging Writers Network, July
- ^Lichtig, Toby, "Deconstructing daddy", A review, TLS, June 6, Review-a-Day, Powell's.
Archived January 31, , at
- ^Erasure pageArchived January 24, , at the Wayback Machine at Graywolf Press.
- ^Kincaid, James, and Percival Everett (). "A History of the African American People by Strom Thurmond (Part 2)", Transition 12(4), 68– Project Muse.
- ^Garstang, Clifford (January 18, ).
"Damned if I Do, by Percival Everett". . Retrieved November 24,
- ^D'Auray, Terry (July 28, ), American Desert review, Archived July 12, , at the Wayback Machine.
- ^Cheuse, Alan (October 11, ), "Percival Everett's 'Wounded': Winter in Wyoming", All Things Considered, NPR.
- ^Krusoe, Jim (August 31, ), "Mirror Images", review of The Water Cure: A Novel, by Percival Everett.
- Percival everett sons
- Percival everett family
- Percival everett danzy senna
- Percival everett books ranked
- ^Lingan, John (December 7, ), "Review: I Am Not Sidney Poitier", Quarterly Conversation. Archived September 25, , at the Wayback Machine.
- ^Everett, Percival (February 5, ). Percival Everett by Virgil Russell: A Novel.
Graywolf Press. ISBN. Archived from the original on June 8, Retrieved June 8,
- ^ ab"The Booker Prize | The Booker Prizes". . Archived from the original on October 5, Retrieved October 5,
- ^Varno, David (February 1, ).
"National Book Critics Circle Announces Finalists for Publishing Year ". National Book Critics Circle. Archived from the original on February 2, Retrieved February 3,
- ^" Prize Recipients".
Percival clothing: ISSN X. Archived October 31, , at the Wayback Machine. I love the way Butler creates the history of the family seemingly without effort and I love the humour. Wikiquote has quotations related to Percival Everett.
Windham Campbell Prizes . Windham Campbell Prizes. Archived from the original on April 21, Retrieved April 21,
- ^Moreau, Jordan (January 23, ). "Oscar Nominations ". Variety. Retrieved November 24,
- ^Everett, Percival (March 19, ). "James: A Novel". . Doubleday. ISBN.
- Percival clothing
- Percival everett james
- Percival
Archived from the original on June 7, Retrieved June 8,
- ^Razzall, Katie (April 9, ). "Percival Everett: Why I rewrote Huckleberry Finn to give slave Jim a voice". BBC News. Archived from the original on April 9, Retrieved April 9,
- ^Allardice, Lisa (July 30, ). "This Booker longlist might just be the most enjoyable of recent years".
The Guardian.
- ^ abCreamer, Ella (September 16, ). "Percival Everett and Rachel Kushner make the Booker prize shortlist". The Guardian.
- ^ abSchaub, Michael (October 16, ).
"Winners of the Kirkus Prize Revealed". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved November 23,
- ^ abAlter, Alexandra (November 20, ). "Percival Everett, Author of 'James,' Wins National Book Award for Fiction". The New York Times.Percival everett books in order Everett showed me his fishing flies, displaying them like a jeweller fingering his gems. Archived from the original on August 14, For Everett, geography is a tool of intervention and manipulation. The book is a parody of westerns and the politics of race and gender.
Retrieved November 20,
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^Bell, Susan (April 20, ). "Percival Everett and David St. John elected to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences". USC Today. University of Southern California.
- ^Joy, Darrin S. (May 5, ).
"Celebrated novelist Percival Everett elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters". USC Dornsife, News and Events. University of Southern California. Retrieved November 24,
- ^ abc"PEN Oakland Awards & Winners". PEN Oakland. Archived from the original on March 1, Retrieved March 1,
- ^ abc"The Hurston/Wright Legacy Award".
African American Literature Book Club. Archived from the original on March 31, Retrieved April 29,
- ^"Past Winners". PEN America. December 19, Archived from the original on April 13, Retrieved October 5,
- ^"Awards: Hurston/Wright Legacy Winners". Shelf Awareness. December 1, Archived from the original on October 2, Retrieved April 29,
- ^Reid, Calvin (November 16, ).
"Kelley, Everett, Dove, Madhubuti Win Hurston/Wright Legacy Awards". Publishers Weekly.
Percival everett books Danzy Senna. Awards for Percival Everett. Rate this book Clear rating 1 of 5 stars 2 of 5 stars 3 of 5 stars 4 of 5 stars 5 of 5 stars. USC Today.Archived from the original on May 28, Retrieved April 29,
- ^" Winners". Festival degli Scrittori - Premio Gregor von Rezzori. Retrieved October 3,
- ^New Fiction by Percival Everett | CHARLES ANGOFF AWARD IN FICTION | Percival Everett: "Confluence", The Literary Review, 26 October Archived October 31, , at the Wayback Machine.
- ^"Winner of the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction announced".
The Drinks Business. November 27, Retrieved November 27,
- ^"Shara McCallum wins the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award for Poetry". Peepal Tree Press. October 28, Archived from the original on March 31, Retrieved April 29,
- ^"Windham-Campbell Prizes recipients announced".
Books+Publishing. April 6, Archived from the original on May 22, Retrieved April 8,
- ^Schaub, Michael (March 3, ). "PEN Award Winners Announced". Kirkus Reviews. Archived from the original on March 6, Retrieved March 6,
- ^Smith, Eliza (March 1, ). "Here are the winners of the PEN America Literary Awards".
Literary Hub. Archived from the original on March 3, Retrieved March 4,
- ^Stewart, Sophia (January 26, ). "PEN America Announces Finalists for Literary Awards". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on December 5, Retrieved March 6,
Washington Post Book World. Review-a-Day, Powell'ed August 2, , at the Wayback Machine
Further reading
- Lucas, Julian (September 27, ).
"Dead reckoning". The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker. 97 (30): 79–
[1] - Maus, Derek C., Jesting in Earnest: Percival Everett and Menippean Satire (University of South Carolina Press; )
- Miceli, Barbara, "Della triste impermanenza di ogni cosa: recensione di Telefono di Percival Everett", in L'Indice dei libri del mese (December )
- Stewart, Anthony, Approximate Gestures: Infinite Spaces in the Fiction of Percival Everett (Louisiana State University Press; )
Interviews
- Percival Everett by Rone Shavers, BOMB 88, Summer Archived January 10, , at the Wayback Machine.
- Shashank Bengali, "The Wicked Wit of Percival Everett", USC Trojan Family Magazine, Winter
- "Percival Everett interview: 'I hope that I have written the novel that Twain did not'".
The Booker Prizes, August 15,
External links
- Blue Flower Arts one of Everett's official websites
- Everett's USC Homepage. (Retrieved December 2, )
- interview with Everett ()
- "A Percival Everett Chronology, ",
- topolivres video interview with Everett ()
- Percival Everett on the myth of race.
Video interview, Austin Community College Arts & Humanities, 2 March (Retrieved December 2, )
- "By the Book | The Classic Novel That Makes Percival Everett Cringe", The New York Times, December 16,
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- ^Online version is titled "Percival Everett's deadly serious comedy".