North Carolina Literary Review Online Winter 2022

Page 31

Writers Who Teach, Teachers Who Write

N C L R ONLINE

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YOU CAN COME HOME AGAIN – AND BE LAUDED: JIM GRIMSLEY RECEIVES 2021 HARDEE RIVES DRAMATIC ARTS AWARD by Lorraine Hale Robinson

Hear Jim Grimsley’s award acceptance remarks here.

ABOVE Playwright Jim Grimsley with the cast members in his

play Mr. Universe, 7 Stages Theatre, Atlanta, GA, 1988

he even gets to know her. It doesn’t matter who she is; she’s simply an object of beauty he must have. Yet when she awakens, it’s discovered that she, as her mother before her, has internalized these views of beauty to such a degree that she’s consumed with her own physical appearance – to the point that she will kill if another woman threatens her beauty. Beauty, after all, equates to self-worth and value. In “As You Can Imagine,” we see how those ideas develop, as well as the ways they’re projected onto women. So enraptured with

PHOTOGRAPH BY RICH ADDICKS; COURTESY OF THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION PHOTOGRAPHIC ARCHIVES, GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY

Endowed by Ralph Hardee Rives (longtime East Carolina University professor and performer/director in productions in North Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia), the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association’s Hardee Rives Award for Dramatic Arts was first presented in 2009 to Bo Thorp. The 2021 recipient is Jim Grimsley for his impressive body of dramatic literature, beginning in 1983. Eastern North Carolina native Grimsley was born in Rocky Mount and was educated at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he studied writing with Doris Betts and Max Steele. When Grimsley moved to Atlanta, he was a secretary at Grady Memorial Hospital for nearly two decades while continuing to write and eventually went on to become Senior Resident Fellow and Director of Creative Writing at Emory University. He retired as an emeritus faculty member in the 2019–2020 academic year and returned to his native state. Grimsley received the George Oppenheimer Award for Best New American Playwright and the Bryan Prize for Drama for his debut four-play collection Mr. Universe and Other Plays (1998), which

was also a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Drama. Grimsley’s broad corpus of literature (drama and novels) received the 2005 Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He has served as playwright in residence at Chicago’s About Face Theatre and Atlanta’s 7 Stages Theatre. His novel Dream Boy has been adapted for both the stage and screen.* n * Read Gary Richards’s essay on Mr. Universe and interview with the playwright in NCLR 2009 and Grimsley’s essay on the film adaptation of Dream Boy in NCLR 2012.

his girlfriend’s perfection – her physical beauty – the narrator can no longer see how to fix women. His therapist, who has now undergone plastic surgery, tells him to recite, “Beauty is subjective. There is no ideal form. The face I saw is an illusion. Whether she’s as the divine power of the universe made her or surgically enhanced, every woman is beautiful in her own way” (23). Yet still he fixates on his girlfriend’s beauty rather than on the person she is. Fawkes’s Tales the Devil Told Me takes well-known stories, stories that are complex in their

own right, and reimagines them in a way that highlights issues prevalent in contemporary society. The fact that these are common experiences readers can relate to, yet experiences no two people can ever share, gives the collection a rich depth. Furthermore, many of the ideas Fawkes tackles in her book raise philosophical questions that have no solution. Perhaps it’s in these personal yet individualistic aspects that the uncanny truly lies, raising questions related to human life, and inspiring emotions and an inner nature we frequently bury. n


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Articles inside

n Flashbacks: Echoes of Past Issues

1hr
pages 102-132

Calling the Bluff on Show-Don’t-Tell

6min
pages 96-97

The Transformational Potential of Writing

6min
pages 92-93

Wintering

2min
pages 90-91

J.J. – 1985

2min
pages 86-87

A Year of Collected Notes: Storytelling Sublime

6min
pages 88-89

Being Christian, Being Jewish

6min
pages 84-85

Love – and Mushrooms and Zooms – in the Ruins

19min
pages 76-82

Debut Novel by Halli Gomez Wins NC AAUW Award

1min
page 71

Turning Reality on Its Head

14min
pages 72-75

Charting Grief, Seeking Solace

8min
pages 68-70

Clichés

2min
page 67

Why I Flinch at the Thought of Daylight Squandered

2min
pages 62-63

A Reading Full of Light

4min
pages 60-61

More Than a Haircut

2min
pages 52-53

A Roving Search for Provisions of Any Kind

4min
pages 58-59

An Unsung Legend

8min
pages 49-51

Ghazal: Reflection and We Think of Night as Still

3min
pages 56-57

Stories about Growing Up Black and Female in America

5min
pages 54-55

The Eye

1min
page 48

You Can Come Home Again – and Be Lauded Jim Grimsley Receives 2021 Hardee Rives Dramatic Arts Award

3min
page 31

Linking the Common and the Uncanny

8min
pages 28-30

People Constructed of Pain and Grief

5min
pages 16-17

New Fiction Reckons with Landscape of Change

9min
pages 20-22

Mixed Messages: A Southern Childhood

3min
pages 18-19

First Published Novel by a Member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Receives 2021 Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award

6min
pages 26-27

Betrayal

1min
page 23

“The Black Condition” in Hell of a Book

5min
pages 12-13

They Have Been at Something Some Carrion, a Deer, or Such

5min
pages 24-25

Borrowed Light

2min
pages 14-15
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