News & Events
News
Sunday, 17 March 2019 00:00

Legends of Lost Man Marsh Published by the Literary Press of Lamar University
LegendsSmall
Lamar Gerald Duff's latest book, Legends of Lost Man Marsh, was released by the Literary Press of Lamar University on March 8, 2019. The press release issued by the Literary Press summarizes the novel: "The two worlds of Austin Bullock collide when Chief Emory Sees the Water dies mysteriously in Lost Man Marsh, part of the Alabama-Coushatta Reservation in the Big Thicket of East Texas. By blood, bone, and history, Austin Bullock is now the Chief of his Nation, responsible for maintaining the welfare of his people. He left the reservation years before to teach history, to coach basketball in the white man's school, and to seek an identify apart from his Native American heritage. Now the song of the Tie Snake, the creature which lives in the dark waters of the swamp, calls Austin Bullock to his mission. Murder, tribal myth and legend, and the contemporary realities of greed and violence from the outside world force Austin Bullock to make choices he has struggled to avoid.

To read the press release in full, click here.

 
News
Saturday, 04 August 2018 00:00

Gerald Duff's Novels Featured in The Wittliff Collections' New Exhibit

  Gerald Duff's novels Blue Sabine and Playing Custer are included in The Wittliff Collections' new exhibition Literary Frontiers: Historical Fiction & the Creative Imagination, running, which runs August 1 through December 14, 2018. The exhibit focuses on the authors and novels that have depicted the history of Texas, including Larry McMurtry's Lonesome Dove, Joe Landsdale's The Big Blow, and Ann Weisgarber's The Personal History of Rachel Dupree. To read The Wittliff Collection's press release, click here.


The Wittliff Collections are located on the seventh floor of the Alkek Library at the Texas State University in San Marco, Texas (601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666). The exhibit is free and runs through December 14.

 
News
Thursday, 03 May 2018 00:00

Nashville Burning Reviewed on Texas Book Lover

NashvilleBurning  TexasBookLover Nashville Burning was reviewed May 1, 2018, on Texas Book Lover. Read the review below--

HISTORICAL FICTION
Gerald Duff
Nashville Burning
Texas Christian University Press
Hardcover, 978-0-8756-5667-0, (also available as an e-book), 320 pgs., $29.95
October 2, 2017

Impact Symposium, Vanderbilt University, April 1967. Guess who's coming to dinner? You won't guess, you'll never guess. The esteemed speakers included Stokely Carmichael, Allen Ginsberg, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Senator Strom Thurmond. I kid you not. Rioting in Nashville followed.

Gerald Duff's new novel, Nashville Burning, takes these few but fantastical historical details and creates richly imagined communities of university faculty and students, maintenance workers and cooks, wandering hippie troubadours and restless housewives, then stirs these communities into a tale of race, sex, class, and generational change.

Nashville Burning opens with a tour of the various neighborhoods of the city and Vanderbilt University, introducing the cast of characters in their native habitats. I was immediately engaged by Duff's tone of ironic formality. The cast is large, but each character is closely drawn with a unique voice and easily differentiated, especially the one in the rat costume and the one who thinks his left arm, being the reincarnated left arm of a Confederate officer, is dead. These diverse voices create a rich chorus of accents and dialects. Duff has a flawless ear for the rhythms of the Old South. Multiple plots and subplots are told in multiple third-person points of view, then seamlessly woven together.

Award-winning author and Texas native Gerald Duff is one of the most versatile writers working today. Nashville Burning is the fifth book by Duff that I've reviewed. One was a memoir, another historical fiction set at the turn of the twentieth century, another a contemporary mystery, and yet another a contemporary comedy about historical re-enactors at Little Big Horn. No matter the genre or time or form, Duff always delivers. Kudos to the design team at Texas Christian University Press—Nashville Burning is a handsome volume with striking jacket art.

This tale of strife in the late 1960s is fine social satire, a sardonic send-up of campus politics, and a sharp-edged portrait of generational conflict. The grave issues so entertainingly explored in Nashville Burning are still hot today.

To read the complete review on Texas Book Lover, click here.

 
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