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Cover image for book The Dead Alive and Busy

The Dead Alive and Busy

Selected Essays of Robert Morgan
By:Robert Morgan
Publisher:University of Tennessee Press
Print ISBN:9798895270523
eText ISBN:9798895270530
Edition:1
Copyright:2026
Format:Reflowable

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“This essay collection brilliantly brings together storytelling, poetry, memoir, and Morgan’s energetic engagement with creative works of art. … I believe this book will be of interest to Robert Morgan’s fans and scholars—and to those interested in American and Appalachian literature and history.”—Sandra L. Ballard, editor of Listen Here: Women Writing in Appalachia For six decades, Robert Morgan has been a preeminent voice in southern Appalachian literature. Growing up in Green River, North Carolina, in the 1950s, he absorbed a variety of influences to inform his later work: his family’s haunting stories, explorations of the mountainous landscape, paperbacks from a bookmobile, lessons from a kind elementary school teacher. Decades later, his acclaimed writing resulted in a fifty-one-year career at Cornell University, a plethora of literary awards, and a place on the New York Times bestseller list. The essays collected in this volume reveal the ways Morgan writes about literature with the same reverence he uses to describe his homeplace. The Dead Alive and Busy is a collection of essays on the author’s personal history, masters of prose, and significant poets. Morgan’s catalogue of literary interests is a melting pot of global traditions, from Leo Tolstoy to Appalachian writers such as Thomas Wolfe and Wilma Dykeman. His analysis covers writers “in a community across time”—including Poe, Hemingway, McCarthy, Carl Sandburg, and the Appalachian poets Jeff Daniel Marion and Jim Wayne Miller. Akin to his own description of Bierstadt’s paintings, Morgan’s writing throughout reflects “intimacy more than spectacle.”