Percival Everett Popular Books

Percival Everett Biography & Facts

Percival Everett (born December 22, 1956) is an American writer and Distinguished Professor of English at the University of Southern California. He has described himself as 'pathologically ironic' and has played around with numerous genres such as western fiction, mysteries, thrillers, satire and philosophical fiction. His books are often satirical, aimed at exploring race and identity issues in the United States. He is best known for his novels Erasure (2001), I Am Not Sidney Poitier (2009), and The Trees (2021), which was shortlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize. Erasure was adapted as the film American Fiction (2023), 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 was the oldest of several children. His father became a dentist and his parents continued to live in South Carolina. The younger Everett eventually moved to the American West. Everett earned a bachelors in philosophy from the University of Miami. He studied a broad variety of topics including biochemistry and mathematical logic. In 1982 he earned an M.A. in fiction from Brown University. Everett now lives in Los Angeles, California with his wife, the novelist, Danzy Senna, and their two children. Everett's great-grandmother was at one point a slave. Literary career While completing his M.A. degree, Everett wrote his first novel, Suder (1983). His lead character was Craig Suder, a Seattle Mariners third baseman in a major league slump, both on and off the field. Everett's second novel, Walk Me to the Distance (1985), 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 entitled Follow Your Heart. Everett disowned this adaptation, stating that "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." Cutting Lisa (1986; re-issued 2000) begins with John Livesey meeting a man who has performed a Caesarean section. This prompts the protagonist to evaluate his relationships. In 1987, Everett published The Weather and Women Treat Me Fair: Stories, a collection of short stories set mostly in the contemporary western United States. In 1990, 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. Switching genres, Everett next wrote a children's book, The One That Got Away (1992). This illustrated book for young readers follows three cowboys as they attempt to corral "ones", the mischievous numerals. Returning to novels, Everett published his first book-length western, God's Country, in 1994. 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. In 1996, 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. In Frenzy (1997), 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. Glyph (1999) is the story within a story of Ralph, a baby who chooses not to speak but has extraordinary muscle control and an IQ nearing 500. 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. Grand Canyon, Inc. (2001) is Everett's first novella. In it, Rhino Tanner attempts to tame Mother Nature with a commercialization of the Grand Canyon. In 2001 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, entitled 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. A History of the African-American People (proposed) by Strom Thurmond, as told to Percival Everett and James Kincaid (2004), 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. Also in 2004, Everett released American Desert and Damned If I Do: Stories, another collection of short stories. 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. Wounded: A Novel (2005) 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. Everett's 2006 collection of poetry, re:f (gesture), features one of his paintings on the front cover. His 2010 poetry book, Swimming Swimmers Swimming, was published by Red Hen Press. The Water Cure (2007) 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 u.... Discover the Percival Everett popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Percival Everett books.

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  • Ploughshares Fall 2014 Guest-Edited by Percival Everett synopsis, comments

    Ploughshares Fall 2014 Guest-Edited by Percival Everett

    Percival Everett, Aimee Bender, Richard Bausch, Edith Pearlman, Brian Evenson, Howard Norman, Karen Tei Yamashita, Nick Arvin, Kafah Bachari, Paula Closson Buck, Carole Burns, Colette, Andrea Dupree, Gina Frangello, Laird Hunt, Lisa Lee, Jay Baron Nicorvo, Katherine Robinson, Elisabeth Sheffield, Christopher Torockio & Paula Whyman

    The Fall 2014 issue of Ploughshares, edited by Percival Everett. Ploughshares, a journal of new writing, is guestedited serially by prominent writers who explore different personal...

  • James synopsis, comments

    James

    Percival Everett

    A brilliant, actionpacked reimagining of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, both harrowing and ferociously funny, told from the enslaved Jim's point of view.  From the “lite...

  • Jesting in Earnest synopsis, comments

    Jesting in Earnest

    Derek C. Maus

    A critical analysis of Percival Everett's oeuvre through the lens of Menippean satirePercival Everett, a distinguished professor of English at the University of Southern California...

  • Race and the Literary Encounter synopsis, comments

    Race and the Literary Encounter

    Lesley Larkin

    What effect has the black literary imagination attempted to have on, in Toni Morrison's words, "a race of readers that understands itself to be 'universal' or racefree"? How has bl...

  • The Sound Of Distant Cheering synopsis, comments

    The Sound Of Distant Cheering

    K M Peyton

    Rosy Weeks works for a local horse trainer at a oncesuccessful stable, now fallen on hard times. In love with the morose owner and passionate about her favourite horse, Roly Fox, c...

  • Els arbres synopsis, comments

    Els arbres

    Percival Everett

    Novel·la finalista del Premi Booker i guanyadora del Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse al millor llibre de ficció humorística del 2022. Un assassinat brutal sacseja el poble de Money (M...

  • Percival Everett by Virgil Russell synopsis, comments

    Percival Everett by Virgil Russell

    Percival Everett

    "Anything we take for granted, Mr. Everett means to show us, may turn out to be a lie." Wall Street Journal Finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize Finalist for the PEN / Fa...

  • Reading Percival Everett synopsis, comments

    Reading Percival Everett

    Claude Julien & Anne-Laure Tissut

    AfricanAmerican writers willingly attend European symposiums dealing with their work because scholars here focus on textual aspects American readers frequently leave aside. The ess...