Andrew Nelson Lytle | |
Birth Date: | 26 December 1902 |
Birth Place: | Murfreesboro, Tennessee, U.S. |
Death Place: | Monteagle, Tennessee, U.S. |
Discipline: | Literature |
Work Institutions: | University of Florida |
Education: | Vanderbilt University (BA) Yale University (MFA) |
Andrew Nelson Lytle (December 26, 1902 – December 12, 1995) was an American novelist, dramatist, essayist and professor of literature.
Andrew Nelson Lytle was born on December 26, 1902, in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.[1] He graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1925.[1]
Lytle's first literary success came as a result of his association with the Southern Agrarians, a movement whose members included poets Robert Penn Warren and Allen Tate, whom Lytle knew from Vanderbilt University. The group of poets, novelists and writers published the 1930s I'll Take My Stand, which expressed their philosophy. The work was attacked by contemporaries, and current scholars believe it to be a reactionary and romanticized defense of the Old South and the Lost Cause of the Confederacy.[2] It ignored slavery and denounced "progress", for example, and some critics considered it to be moved by nostalgia.
In 1948, Lytle helped start the Master of Fine Arts program at the University of Florida.[3]
Lytle first published a biography of Nathan Bedford Forrest, the Confederate general of the American Civil War: Bedford Forrest and his Critter Company (1931). Lytle went on to write more than a dozen books, including novels, collected short stories, and collections of essays on literary and cultural topics.
Most critics[4] consider The Velvet Horn (1957) to be Lytle's best work. It was nominated for the National Book Award for fiction. His 1973 memoir, A Wake For The Living, is a tour-de-force in Southern storytelling, combining a deep religious sensibility, an expansive view of history that links events across decades and even centuries, and—sometimes—bawdy family tales.
Lytle served as editor of the Sewanee Review from 1961 to 1973 while he was a professor at the University of the South. During Lytle's tenure, the Review became one of the nation's most prestigious literary magazines. Lytle was an early champion of Flannery O'Connor's work. Lytle encouraged many writers, including Allen Tate and Robert Penn Warren, but also Elizabeth Bishop, Caroline Gordon, and Robert Lowell. His insightful criticism often improved their work.
Lytle taught literature and creative writing at the University of Florida, where he had Merrill Joan Gerber, Madison Jones and Harry Crews as students.
Though Lytle retired from the University of the South in 1973, he never fully retired from either writing or teaching. In the last years of his life, he had what he called the "great pleasure" of seeing most of his earlier books come back into print. Several university presses published collections of his stories and essays.
Lytle was the owner of Cornsilk, a historic house in Cross Plains, Tennessee, in the 1940s.[5] He died on December 13, 1995, in Monteagle, Tennessee.[1]
Lytle Street in Murfreesboro is named after his ancestor William Lytle, of Hillsboro, N.C. who served in the Sixth, First, and Fourth regiments of the North Carolina Line during the Revolutionary War. He moved to Tennessee in about 1790.
A Reading (1992)