|
|
||||
|
TERRY KAY BIO
Award-winning novelist Terry Kay was born in Hart
County, Georgia, the eleventh of twelve children. He was
reared on a farm and was graduated from West Georgia
Junior College and LaGrange College, earning a degree in
Social Science, with extensive study in theater arts. He
began his career in journalism in 1959 at the
Decatur-DeKalb News, a
weekly newspaper in Decatur (GA) and later worked for
The Atlanta Journal as a
sportswriter and, for eight years, as one of America’s
leading film-theater critics.
Kay resigned from The Atlanta Journal in 1973
to begin a career in public relations, later becoming
Senior Vice President of Corporate Affairs for
Oglethorpe Power Corporation. In 1989, he left the
corporate world to devote full time to writing.
Kay’s first novel, published in 1976, was
The Year the Lights Came On,
a story inspired by his memory of the coming of
electricity to his rural community.
It was followed
in 1981 by
After Eli,
a disturbing view of a charming Irish actor terrorizing
an Appalachian community.
In 1984,
Dark Thirty,
an examination of justice vs. vengeance, also set in
Appalachia, was published.
Publication of his first three novels established Kay as
a writer of versatility, able to switch genre and voice
with ease and command.
In 1990, Kay’s signature novel,
To Dance With the White Dog,
was released, quickly taking its place among Southern
literary classics and establishing Kay as one of the
region’s foremost writers. Inspired by Kay’s own
parents, it is the story of an octogenarian and a
mysterious white dog that comes to live with him
following the death of his wife of 57 years.
To Dance With the White Dog
earned Kay the Outstanding Author of the Year award in
1991 from the Southeastern Library Association. The book
was twice nominated for the American Booksellers’ Book
of the Year (ABBY) award and was named by the Georgia
Center for the Book as one of the 25 recommended books
for all Georgians to read. In 1993 it was presented as a
Hallmark Hall of Fame movie for CBS television, starring
Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy. The production earned the
highest television rating of the 1993 season, with more
than 33 million viewers. Cronyn won that year’s Emmy for
Best Actor in the role of Sam Peek, the character based
on Kay’s father.
Among the numerous enthusiastic endorsements of the
novel, the Most Reverend Desmond M. Tutu, Anglican
Archbishop of Capetown, called it “ . . . a hauntingly
beautiful story about love, family and relationships.”
Novelist Anne Rivers Siddons said of the book, “To Dance
With the White Dog is what literature is – or should be
– all about . . .” The New York Times characterized it
as “Memorable . . . a tender and bracing tale.” And the
Kansas City Star’s review noted, “To say it is rich,
fine, sweet, and true is to minimize its power. This is
poetry pretending to be fiction.”
Further proof of the universality of
To Dance With the White Dog
is the phenomenal success in Japan, where more than two
million copies are in print. In addition, a children’s
book version has been produced and a Japanese motion
picture version was released in 2002.
Shadow Song,
a love story set in the Catskill Mountains where Kay
worked as a waiter in a Jewish resort as a young man,
was published in 1995. It was followed in 1997 by
The Runaway,
a story of social change in the South following World
War II. (The
Runaway
was also produced as a Hallmark Hall of Fame movie for
CBS television, featuring Dean Cain and Maya Angelou,
and was released in 2002.)
In 1999, Kay again switched genres with
The Kidnapping of Aaron Greene,
a mystery set in Atlanta. And in 2000,
Taking Lottie Home,
one of Kay’s personal favorites and considered by many
as his finest novel, was released. Also in 2000, a
collection of essays called
Special Kay: The Wisdom of Terry Kay,
was published.
The Valley of Light,
published in 2003, tells the story of a gifted wandering
fisherman following World War II. It won both the 2004
Townsend Award and the Best Fiction Award from the
Georgia Writers Association for 2004. It was also
released as a Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation in
2007, starring Chris Klein and Gretchen Mol, making it
Kay's third novel to be selected by Hallmark for
production.
Additionally in 2004,
The Valley of Light
was published as a book bonus offering from Readers
Digest's Condensed Book series.
Kay's most recent book, released by Mercer University
Press in 2007, is
The Book of Marie, a sensitive insight into the
profound effect the civil rights movement had on rural
towns and communities of the south. It tells the story
of a remarkable and aggressive young woman (Marie) in
the mid-50s and her warnings to Cole Bishop and her
other classmates at Overton High School about coming
social events that will inevitably change their lives.
Kay is also the author of the children’s book,
To Whom the Angel Spoke:
A Story of the Christmas,
released in 1991.
Translations of Kay’s fiction have been published in
numerous foreign countries, including Japan, Korea,
Taiwan, Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, Sweden, Germany
and Holland. His work has appeared in numerous
publications and anthologies, including Reader’s Digest,
Atlanta Magazine, A Confederacy of Crime and The
Chattahoochee Review. He scripted an episode of In the
Heat of the Night and won a Southern Emmy for his
original teleplay,Run
Down the Rabbit.
He is also the author of a play,
Piano Cabaret.
In addition to his journalism and corporate and writing
careers, Kay has taught as a visiting lecturer in the
Department of English at Emory University and twice
directed Emory’s summer creative writing program. In
1984, he hosted The Southern Voice, a PBS affiliate
(WPBA/Channel 30 of Atlanta) series on Southern
literature.
Among his honors, Kay was named one of the eight best
theater critics in America in 1968 by the Sang Jury on
Fine Art Criticism. He served on Georgia’s first
film-television commission, on appointment by
then-Governor Jimmy Carter. A documentary by the
University of West Florida on Kay’s experiences as a
writer was broadcast over PBS affiliates in 1994.
Other honors and awards include:
•
Election to the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame (induction
in April, 2006)
•
Recipient of the Stanley W. Lindberg Award,
2007, for outstanding contribution to the literary
heritage of Georgia
•
Recipient of the Townsend Award, 2004,
for The Valley of Light
•
Author of the Year, 1982, for
After Eli.
Presented by Georgia Council of Authors and Journalists
•
Awarded honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, LaGrange
College, 1999
•
Awarded honorary Doctor of Literature, Mercer
University, 2002
•
Honorary member of Phi Theta Kappa honor society from
Young Harris College
•
Honorary member of Phi Kappa Phi, honor society from
University of Georgia
•
Named by Georgia Trend magazine as one of Georgia's most
Powerful and Influential People, 1995 and 2001
•
Member Advisory Council, Byron Herbert Reece Society
Kay has been married for 48 years and has four children
and eight grandchildren. He currently resides in Athens,
Georgia.
|
||||