Southern Authors Worth Reading

Even though you likely have a good understanding of the types of books you enjoy, but one of the great things about literature is that it gives you the opportunity to try different things – and if you are looking to try different things, the great thing about literature is that large chunks of literature are grouped together into different categories; one of the categories that grew to prominence in the early 1900s with such writers as Mark Twain and Robert Penn Warren – and that reached its zenith in the middle of the 20th century – was Southern fiction, which was characterized by its flowing, poetic prose against a dark and totally honest backdrop.

When you hear the words “Southern fiction,” there are few names that come to mind more quickly than William Faulkner; Faulkner was the anti-Hemingway (in fact he and Hemingway endured a lifelong feud, driven by their work), as he typically went for the large-scale in his prose, rather than the minimalistic style Hemingway preferred, and while both men were drastically different, each of them are still hailed today as two of the greatest men to ever put the pen to paper.

One of the most interesting women in Southern fiction was Carson McCullers; McCullers penned her masterpiece “ 301 Moved Permanently

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">The Heart is a Lonely Hunter” when she was only 23 years old, and although the rest of her career (admirable though it was!) did not quite measure up to her tremendous debut, that first novel of hers left readers with an enduring work that still echoes through minds more than 50 years later.

And there has probably been no personality in literature that was ever bigger than Truman Capote – but often overshadowed by his great, big personality is the fact that he was also one of the greatest writers of his age. While Capote wrote many books and short stories that still endure today, his crowning work was “ 301 Moved Permanently

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">In Cold Blood,” which was published over 40 years ago, and which revolutionized the nonfiction genre forever.

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