“I
think as the world changes, we have to keep up. We have to note what is
happening, and I think writing has always had a powerful corrective influence
and possibility. We have to write about what's good, and we also have to write
about parts of our culture that are not good, that are not working out. I think
it takes a new eye.” – Lee
Smith
Born in Virginia on Nov. 1, 1944, Smith typically incorporates much of
her background from the Southeastern United States into her works. She has
received writing awards, such as the O. Henry Award, the American Academy of
Arts and Letters Award for Fiction, the North Carolina Award for Literature,
and, in April 2013, was the first recipient of Mercer University's Sidney
Lanier Prize for Southern Literature.
“I
write about people in small towns; I don't write about people living in big
cities,” Smith said. “My kind of
storytelling depends upon people that have time to talk to each other.” Imagine that!
Smith published her first novel 50
years ago, and
in the intervening years, she’s published 13 more novels and
four short story collections & her memoir. Her novel The Last Girls won the Southern Book Critics
Circle Award.
She
advises not to use up your entire life story in your very first efforts. “I think what happens to young writers is
that they use up every life experience that they have had up to that point for
their first novel. Then you have to come up with something for the second
novel, but you really don't have anything to say.”
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