Randall Silvis
AUTHOR

Randall Silvis

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Randall Silvis is the internationally acclaimed author of over nineteen novels, three story collections, and two books of narrative nonfiction. Also a prize-winning playwright, a produced screenwriter, and a prolific essayist, he has been published and produced in virtually every field and genre of creative writing. His numerous essays, articles, poems and short stories have appeared in the Discovery Channel magazines, The Writer, Prism International, Short Story International, Manoa, and numerous other online and print magazines. His work is available in twenty countries in over two hundred editions in several languages. . Silvis’s many literary awards include two writing fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the prestigious Drue Heinz Literature Prize, a Fulbright Senior Scholar Research Award, six fellowships for his fiction, drama, and screenwriting from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and an honorary Doctor of Letters degree awarded for “a sustained career of distinguished literary achievement.” “I envy people who are yet to encounter the work of Randall Silvis. I envy them for the thrill they will experience from his picturesque language, his poetic descriptions, and his skillful metaphors. Randall raises the bar so high that after him it’s difficult to read anything else.” BG Storyteller “The Ryan DeMarco Mystery series by Randall Silvis sets a new standard for noir mystery, a standard not soon to be scaled by any other author any time soon.” Susan Wingate, host of Dialogue: Between the Lines, Authors on the Air “Randall Silvis is an author’s author. Those who write for a living (or aspire to do so) could hardly do better than to study his significant body of work, which has been critically acclaimed and recognized throughout the world…an author who never disappoints.” Book Reporter “Randall Silvis gets to the hearts and souls of his characters like few, if any, other novelists.” New York Times best-selling author John Lescroart “Randall Silvis is a masterful storyteller.” The New York Times Book Review From Randall: For as long as I can remember, I have been drawn to life’s oddities, human and otherwise. Maybe that’s why the first book of fiction to make a lasting claim on my attention was Ray Bradbury’s October Country. That story collection presented life as a series of carnival sideshows, and that was exactly how the pre-adolescent me viewed life, and how I view it still—life as a temporary village of tattered, wind-vulnerable tents pegged into the mud and sawdust, each holding a tantalizing secret, the three-breasted woman, the dog-faced boy, each with its story of wretchedness and woe, each startling sight producing its own particular tingle of love and kinship and revulsion. A sensitive, creative boy cannot grow up in the coalfields of Pennsylvania without also seeing himself as freakish. If he is lucky he can hide the freakishness behind his athleticism, but sooner or later he must embrace what he is or climb into the bottle or go mad. At nineteen I chose the first option. I stopped studying to become an accountant and drove across the country in a 1958 Thunderbird, pausing to rest only when something sufficiently freakish called my name. Along the way I discovered a kinship with the Native American culture, and on subsequent trips I swung south to soak up the mysticism and supernatural elements of the Hispanic cultures. My mother’s family has Scottish roots, my father’s has Portuguese, so it isn’t hard to discern how an affinity for the numinous got twisted up with the otherwise freaky strands of my DNA. For those with an interest in symbology and the sometimes surprisingly aptness of that symbolism, my last name, Silvis, derives from the Portuguese da Silva, and means “from the woods.” And as it turns out, my first name Randall, given to me by my mother just because she liked the sound of it, means “shield wolf.” The shield wolf is described as “a large, mysterious wolf that prefers to live a solitary life rather than living in a pack.” And, as a solitary shield wolf, I have always preferred the woods to any other venue. Did my name determine my personality, or did my innate personality somehow choose my parents prior to birth? My first book was labeled as magical realism, and rightfully so. I was living in San Diego when I wrote those stories, reading One Hundred Years of Solitude and Leaf Storm and most of Carlos Castaneda’s books between trips into Tijuana and Ensenada and the low desert beyond California’s El Cajon. But I was also reading Steinbeck’s The Log from the Sea of Cortez and The Grapes of Wrath, Knut Hamsun’s Hunger and Growth of the Soil, all of Hemingway and Faulkner, John Fante, Irwin Shaw, Harvey Swados, Thomas Pynchon, Eudora Welty, James Lee Burke, Flannery O’Connor, Umberto Eco, Henry Miller, Stanley Elkin, Isaac Singer, Lewis Nordan, Borges, Barth, Ondaatje, Goyen, Beckett, Robbins, Brautigan, and just about anything else I could lay my hands on. Then, in the slow blink of an increasingly farsighted eye, two dozen other books have followed, with another eight awaiting a final polish, and six or seven others outlined and waiting for the pen. All of those books feature characters who, at least subcutaneously, are as solitary and weird and full of wondering as I am. Call the books mysteries, mainstream, literary, slipstream, fabulism, fantasy, dirty magic realism, whatever you feel like calling them. Each is just one more tattered tent along the muddy midway of life.
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