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Ron Rash grew up in Boiling Springs, North Carolina,
and graduated from Gardner-Webb College and Clemson University.
Rash's family has lived in the southern Appalachian Mountains since
the eighteenth century, and this region has been the primary focus
of his writing career. He cites a diverse array of writers, including
James Joyce, Philip Roth, and Eudora Welty, as important influences
on his creative approach to place.
Rash's poetry and fiction have appeared in many magazines, such
as Sewanee Review, Yale Review, Georgia Review, New England
Review, Poetry, and The Oxford American. He is the
author of three short story collections, The Night the New Jesus
Fell to Earth (1994), Casualties (2000), and Chemistry
and Other Stories (2007); three volumes of poetry, Eureka
Mill (2001), Among the Believers (2000), and Raising
the Dead (2002); three novels, One Foot in Eden (2004),
Saints at the River (2004), and The World Made Straight
(2007); and a children's book, The Shark's Tooth (2001).
His list of awards includes The Academy of American Poets Prize,
the Sherwood Anderson Award, the Fellowship of Southern Writers'
James Still Award for Writing of the Appalachian South, the O. Henry
Prize, and the Southern Book Critic Circle Award. He has taught
at the University of South Carolina and is
currently the Parris Distinguished Professor of Appalachian Studies
at Western Carolina University.
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