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Conversations with Ellen Gilchrist

Conversations with Ellen Gilchrist

Edited by Tracy Carr
Series: Literary Conversations Series

Hardcover : 9781496859686, 208 pages, December 2025
Paperback : 9781496859693, 208 pages, December 2025

Table of contents

Introduction
Chronology
State Native’s First Novel Parallels Pains of Her Life
Lela J. Davis / 1983
PostScripts No. 7: Ellen Gilchrist
Edward Cohen / 1984
Ellen Gilchrist Interview
Kay Bonetti / 1986
Ellen Gilchrist: A Voice of Southern Conflict
Melissa Biggs / 1987
The Woman as Writer and Reader: A Group of Award-Winning Women Writers Discuss Issues of Special Interest to Women
Josephine Humphreys, Louise Shivers, Gloria Naylor, and Ellen Gilchrist / 1988
Evaluating the Eighties
Robert MacNeil, Wendy Wasserstein, Isaac Stern, Robert Stone, August Wilson, Sam Gilliam, and Ellen Gilchrist / 1989
Interview with Ellen Gilchrist
James McKinley / 1991
Ellen Gilchrist: The Prize-Winning Short Story Writer Now Finds Novels Better Serve Her Vision
Wendy Smith / 1992
Voice of Rhoda Instructs Authors
Beth Macy / 1993
Interview with Ellen Gilchrist
Rebecca Newth / 1994
A Conversation with Ellen Gilchrist
Martha Wilson and Gwen Sell / 1995
Conversation with Ellen Gilchrist
Kyle Kellams / 1998
Author Uses Her Imagination
Lori Herring / 2000
Ellen Gilchrist Discusses “Rich,” Theme, Imagery, and Learning from Huckleberry Finn
Paul Mandelbaum / 2004
Arkansas Memories Project: Ellen Gilchrist Interview
Scott Lunsford / 2010
The Last Southern Writer? An Interview with Ellen Gilchrist
Luke Lampton and Scott Anderson / 2013
Telling True Stories: An Interview with Ellen Gilchrist
Erin Z. Bass / 2017
In Conversation with Ellen Gilchrist
Holly Lange / 2022
Index

Collected interviews with the National Book Award-winning author of Victory Over Japan and many other critically acclaimed works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry

Description

Known for her short stories populated by a recurring cast of headstrong, honest, and sometimes outrageous Southern women characters, Ellen Gilchrist’s (1935–2024) four decades of writing and twenty-six works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry solidly place her among the South’s most enduring authors.

After winning a National Book Award in 1984 for the short story collection Victory Over Japan, she was a weekly commentator on NPR’s then-new Morning Edition. While she wrote six critically acclaimed novels, short stories were where she was truly at home, especially those featuring Rhoda Manning, her most famous and most autobiographical character. Of Rhoda, Gilchrist said, “I can feel Rhoda. Of all my women characters or female characters, Rhoda’s the one that I can feel and smell and touch. I can see things through her eyes.”

The eighteen interviews featured in this collection reveal Gilchrist to be just as honest, and sometimes outrageous, as her characters. Whether she is discussing her work or her life, Gilchrist’s excitement and zest for life comes through in every word.