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High Wallow High Wallow
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Double Springs Double Springs
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Paradise’s Fool Paradise’s Fool
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Mountain Bride Mountain Bride
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Audubon’s Flute Audubon’s Flute
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Cite
Extract
Born in Hendersonville, North Carolina, Robert Morgan grew up on his family’s farm and wrote his first short story in the sixth grade at the prompting of a teacher. During college, after a professor said reading one of Morgan’s stories moved him to tears, Morgan transferred from North Carolina State University, where he was studying mathematics and engineering, to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, majoring in English. He began encouraging young writers himself when he accepted a teaching position at Cornell University in 1971. Since then, Morgan has made his academic home at Cornell in Ithaca, New York, on the northern edge of Appalachia, but his creative home is the southern mountains of his boyhood and young adult years.
In college, Morgan began writing short stories seriously but shifted to poetry in graduate school while studying with Fred Chappell at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, earning an MFA degree in 1968. Morgan’s first book, Zirconia Poems (1969), illuminated his home community in Henderson County. His first collection of short stories, The Blue Valleys, appeared in 1989. A prolific and critically acclaimed writer, Morgan gained popular attention nationwide via an endorsement from Oprah’s Book Club for the novel Gap Creek (1999). Morgan’s careful attention to poetic structure is informed by his broad reading in Chinese, Japanese, French, American, and British poetry. His concern with place, land, and people in western North Carolina has captured the interest of a large number of readers and critics, especially as his poetry has moved from a formal to a more speaker-focused and narrative expression.
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