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from Jack and the Mad Dog from Jack and the Mad Dog
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Cite
Extract
Tony Earley was born in San Antonio, Texas, and grew up in North Carolina near the Blue Ridge Mountains. He graduated from Warren Wilson College in 1983 and earned an MFA in creative writing from the University of Alabama. Since 1997 he has taught writing at Vanderbilt University.
Earley’s fiction is often set in the mountains of North Carolina. Although his sentence structures have been compared to Hemingway’s, Earley cites William Faulkner as the primary inspiration for his style. Earley self-identifies as Appalachian, and says that he strives to articulate universal concerns through the lens of locale. Earley has written novels, short story collections, and novellas.
Some of Earley’s fiction, including Jack and the Mad Dog, has affinities with folklore and the supernatural as well as the weird tale as practiced by twentieth-century authors such as Manly Wade Wellman, who also uses an Appalachian setting. The protagonist of Jack and the Mad Dog is the trickster-hero of the traditional Jack tales. An example of a traditional Jack tale appears in part V of this anthology.
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