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NGE >> Literature >> Fiction >> Authors >> Terry Kay (b. 1938) |
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Terry Kay (b. 1938)
Terry Winter Kay was born February 10, 1938, in Hart County, the eleventh of twelve children of T. H. Kay, a farmer and nurseryman, and Viola Winn Kay. He grew up on a farm, played football for Royston High School, and earned his B.A. degree in social science from LaGrange College in 1959. In August of that year, he married Tommie Duncan. Early Career and Breakthrough Novel
Kay's first novel, The Year the Lights Came On (1976), began as a magazine piece that his friend Pat Conroy encouraged him to turn into
Kay set his second novel, After Eli (1981), in a remote Appalachian village in the Great Smoky Mountains during the late 1930s. Michael O'Rear, an itinerant and charismatic Irishman, attempts to win the hearts of Rachel Pettit, her daughter, and her sister, in order to find a legendary fortune left by Eli Pettit. A drama of unfolding terror and psychological horror, the novel is a disturbing ghost story, for which Kay received the Georgia Author of the Year Award from the Georgia Writers Association. Dark Thirty (1984), set also in the hills of north Georgia, continues the theme of violence. In 1990 Kay published his breakthrough novel, To Dance with the White Dog. The work made him internationally famous. The Hallmark Hall of Fame 1993 dramatization of the novel, filmed in Americus and Plains, won an Emmy. The novel began as a nonfiction work to celebrate Kay's parents' long marriage and to recount how his father, who died of cancer in 1980, was visited by a white dog after his wife's death in 1973. The eighty-one-year-old protagonist, Sam Peek, has just lost his wife, Cora, after fifty-seven
Kay followed this best-seller with Shadow Song (1994), drawn from three summers spent working in the Catskill Mountains in New York to save money for college. Shadow Song, like Kay's first novel, began as a magazine piece, and once again Pat Conroy urged him to turn the story into a longer work. In 1997 Kay published The Runaway, a novel set in the small town of Crossover, Georgia, shortly after World War II (1941-45). Son Jesus and Tom, both twelve years old, lead a kind of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn life of adventure until they discover human bones in an old sawmill. Later Works The plot of The Kidnapping of Aaron Greene (1999) was conceived by Kay more than twenty-five years before its publication, when he worked for the Atlanta Journal. Aaron Greene is kidnapped on his way to his job as a mail clerk at an Atlanta bank. The kidnappers ask for $10 million, not from his family but from the bank. The manager, seeing Aaron as a "nobody," refuses to pay the ransom, and Aaron is left frightened and alone, waiting for the life-or-death outcome. Kay's novel Taking Lottie Home (2000) is set in northeast Georgia and is the story of a woman named Lottie Barton, "something of an amateur prostitute," who, leaving her shanty home in Augusta, meets two failed minor league ballplayers on a train. Despite her trials and failures, Lottie "never loses her innocence." The Valley of Light (2003) is Kay's ninth novel. The story concerns a young fisherman in the north Georgia
Set in 2004 The Book of Marie (2007) explores race relations during the 1960s in the fictional town of Overton, Georgia, through the recollections of Cole Bishop, a white scholar living in Vermont. Cole, at sixty-eight, writes a memoir of his high school relationship with a white girl named Marie, who moved to Overton in their senior year and does not accept as natural the town's segregation. The events of that year and their subsequent lifelong correspondence haunts Cole's personal life and shapes his understanding of the tumultuous civil rights era in Georgia. In his author's note, Kay writes that the novel grows out of, but is not a sequel to, The Runaway and describes the work as "a love story. . . . The theme of social change is still present, but more as background than as issue." The Book of Marie garnered for Kay a Georgia Author of the Year Award in 2008. In 2011 Kay published the novel Bogmeadow's Wish and the short story collection The Greats of Cuttercane: The Southern Stories, for which he received another Georgia Author of the Year Award. In addition to his fiction, Kay has also written a children's book, To Whom the Angels Spoke: A Story of the Christmas (1991), and a collection of columns and essays, Special K: The Wisdom of Terry Kay (2000). Awards and Family
In 1999 LaGrange College awarded him an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, and in 2006 he was inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame. The following year Kay received the Stanley W. Lindberg Award, sponsored by the Georgia Center for the Book and named for Stanley Lindberg, former editor of the Georgia Review. In 2009 he received a Governor's Award in the Humanities, and in 2011 he received the Lifetime Acheivement Award from the Georgia Writers Association. Kay lives with his wife in Athens, Georgia; the couple has four children and ten grandchildren. Suggested Reading Contemporary Authors, vol. 110 (Detroit: Gale, 1984), s.v. "Terry Kay." Contemporary Southern Men Fiction Writers: An Annotated Bibliography (Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow, 1998), s.v. "Terry Kay." Contemporary Southern Writers (Detroit: St. James, 1999), s.v. "Terry Kay." Bob Summer, "PW Interviews: Terry Kay," Publishers Weekly, October 10, 1994. Gary Kerley, North Hall High School Updated 8/3/2012 |
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