Chattanooga Times Free Press

Authors Singleton, Edgerton headline Writers@Work

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George Singleton and Clyde Edgerton will be the featured authors when Chattanoog­a State Community College presents its annual Writers@Work program, beginning Monday, April 2.

The program provides a series of readings, book signings, drama and interviews for the public to learn more about the featured guests and their work.

Singleton’s work, “The Half Mammals of Dixie,” will be the event’s featured book. “The Half Mammals of Dixie” is a collection of short stories published in 2003 about “regular people just trying to get by.”

Singleton was born in Anaheim, Calif., but raised in Greenwood, S.C. He grew up wanting to be a track coach, but a college injury changed that trajectory. After some interest in law, he decided to pursue his love of writing, which had appeared in his late teens.

His writing has led to a number of awards and accolades including a finalist for the 2013 SIBA Book Awards, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Hillsdale Award for Fiction from the Fellowship of Southern Writers. He was inducted into the Fellowship of Southern Writers in April 2015, after accepting the Cobb Endowed Chair in the Humanities at Wofford College, where he currently teaches.

He has written seven collection­s of short stories, three novels and an instructio­nal book on writing fiction.

Edgerton was raised near Durham, N.C. After serving in the Air Force during the Vietnam War, he finished his formal education by completing his Ph.D in 1977.

After teaching high school and college English classes, he broke onto the literary scene with “Raney” in 1985. His works, generally set in the South, explore themes of hypocrisy, religion and love.

He is the author of 10 novels, an advice book, a memoir, short stories and essays. His latest novel is “Where Trouble Sleeps.”

He has been a Guggenheim Fellow, is a member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers and is the Thomas S. Kenan III Distinguis­hed Professor of Creative Writing at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Clyde Edgerton, left, and George Singleton
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Clyde Edgerton, left, and George Singleton
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