Author Returns to University to Read From Prize-winning Fiction

Published

University of Louisiana at Ā鶹“«Ć½app graduate Wiley Cashā€™s New York Times bestselling debut novel, ā€œA Land More Kind than Home,ā€ is snagging awards, notching rave reviews and earning the 35-year-old North Carolina native loads of literary world status.

ā€œA Land More Kind than Home,ā€ which revolves around a young autistic boy who is smothered during a church healing service, won the John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger Award from the Crime Writers Association of America. Since the bookā€™s April publication by William Morrow/HarperCollins, Cash has become something of a media darling, grabbing the attention of Vanity Fair, National Public Radio and other media.

The New York Times calls ā€œA Land More Kind than Homeā€ a "mesmerizing first novel" and an "intensely felt and beautifully told story.ā€ The Washington Post says: "[With] this clear-sighted, graceful debut [Cash] adds his promising new voice to Southern fiction."

The author, who earned a doctoral degree in English from UL Ā鶹“«Ć½app in 2008, will return to campus for a 7:30 p.m. reading Monday at the Ernest J. Gaines Center in Edith Garland DuprĆ© Library. The event, hosted by UL Ā鶹“«Ć½appā€™s Creative Writing Program, the English Department and the Ernest J. Gaines Center, is free and open to the public.

Cash, a North Carolina native, credits much of his critical and commercial success to Gaines, UL Ā鶹“«Ć½appā€™s writer-in-residence emeritus. Cash has said he enrolled at UL Ā鶹“«Ć½app to study under Gaines, whose works include ā€œThe Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittmanā€ and ā€œA Lesson Before Dying,ā€ which won a National Book Critics Circle Award.

ā€œI chose UL Ā鶹“«Ć½appā€¦(because) I wanted a really rich cultural experience and thatā€™s exactly what I found when I went down there. But the primary reason was Ernest Gaines taught there,ā€ said Wiley during an interview broadcast on a University of North Carolina television station.

Cash started writing ā€œA Land More Kind than Homeā€ while studying at UL Ā鶹“«Ć½app, according to information on his Web site (wileycash.com). ā€œI began writing ā€œA Land More Kind than Homeā€ while working on my Ph.D. at the University of Louisiana, where I spent five long years sweating, celebrating Mardi Gras, and missing the mountains of North Carolina. While living in Ā鶹“«Ć½app, I took a fiction workshop with Ernest J. Gaines, who taught me that by writing about home I could recreate that place no matter where I lived. Gaines made this clear to me one afternoon while we were visiting an old cemetery near the plantation where he was born. He pointed to a grave marker and said, ā€˜You remember Snookum from ā€˜A Gathering of Old Men?ā€™ Heā€™s buried right over there.ā€™ā€

Wiley, who teaches fiction and nonfiction writing at Southern New Hampshire University, credits another UL Ā鶹“«Ć½app professor, Reggie Scott Young, with sparking the inspiration for ā€œA Land More Kind than Home.ā€  Cash detailed the experience in his Vanity Fair interview.

ā€œI was taking a class in African American literature, and my professor brought in a news story about a young, autistic African American boy ā€“ I think he might have been like 14 ā€“ who was smothered in a healing service on the South Side of Chicago at a storefront church. Itā€™s tragic, but I just thought it was so interesting, because I was raised in an evangelical church. The church I went to was Southern Baptist. There werenā€™t things like faith healings that extreme, but it was something that I knew about and that I was comfortable talking about.ā€

In addition to his doctoral degree from UL Ā鶹“«Ć½app, Cash holds a bachelorā€™s degree in literature from the University of North Carolina-Asheville and a masterā€™s degree in English from the University of North Carolina-Greensboro. His stories have appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Roanoke Review and The Carolina Quarterly. He lives with his wife in West Virginia.

For more information, contact Marthe Reed at mreed@louisiana.edu or (337) 482-5503 or Derek Mosley at dmosley@louisiana.edu or (337) 482-1848.

CONTACT: Charlie Bier
(337) 482-6397 charlie@louisiana.edu