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Randall Silvis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Randall Silvis
BornMadison Township, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • playwright
  • screenwriter
  • educator
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPennsylvania Western University, Clarion
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Notable awardsDrue Heinz Literature Prize (1984)

Randall Silvis is an American novelist, the author of short fiction and nonfiction, a playwright, a screenwriter, a poet, and a teacher of creative writing.

Life

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Born in Madison Township, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, he was educated at Clarion University and Indiana University of Pennsylvania. In 2008, Silvis was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters from Indiana University of Pennsylvania for "a sustained career of distinguished literary achievement."

Awards

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He won the Drue Heinz Literature Prize in 1984 for his first book, selected by Joyce Carol Oates. He is the recipient of two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and a Fulbright Senior Scholar Research Award, plus six fellowship awards from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts for his fiction, drama, and screenwriting. His novels An Occasional Hell and Two Days Gone were finalists for the Hammett Prize for literary excellence in crime writing from the International Association of Crime writers, and two of his short stories were nominated for a Pushcart Award. On Night's Shore, Two Days Gone, and Only the Rain were Amazon #1 Bestsellers in psychological suspense.

Other literary awards include: • “Dog Days,” Finalist, The William Faulkner – Wisdom Creative Writing Competition 2024, poetry category • “Hurt People,” First Runner-Up, The William Faulkner – Wisdom Creative Writing Competition 2024, novella category • Honey, Semi-Finalist, The William Faulkner – Wisdom Creative Writing Competition 2024, novel category • Hurricane, Semi-Finalist, The William Faulkner – Wisdom Creative Writing Competition 2024, novella category • “On Bluebird Lane,” First Place, The 2024 Tennessee Williams Short Story Prize from the Key West Art & Historical Society • “Wamsutta,” Finalist, F(r)iction Magazine 2024 short story contest • Eyelands International Novel Contest 2023, finalist for A Long & Winding Road • Hawthornden Fellowship, Hawthornden Castle, Midlothian, Scotland; dates of residency to be determined • Pabst Endowed Chair for Master Artists, Atlantic Center for the Arts • In a Town Called Mundomuerto, winner of the 2007 Omnidawn Publishing Fabulist Novel contest; named one of SfSite.com’s Ten Best Books of the Year • Heart So Hungry named a Toronto Globe & Mail Best Book of the Year ·• James Thurber Writer-in-Residence, The Thurber House/The Ohio State University • Three-time winner, National Playwrights Showcase Award • Two-time winner, Pittsburgh New Works Play Festival • Mercyhurst College Writer-in-Residence           • Grand Prize, Screenwriting Showcase Awards, for The Algerian • The Best American Mystery Stories 2013, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, for The Indian • Best of the Net Anthology 2013, for short story “Young Love”• "Wanted," First runner-up in the Cesar Egido Serrano Foundation Flash Fiction Contest • Finalist for the Anything But Hollywood Screenwriting Award Finalist for the New Century Writers Screenplay Award • Finalist for the Beverly Hills Theater Guild/Julie Harris Playwright Award • Ruby Lloyd Apsey Playwriting Award from the University of Alabama at Birmingham • MacDowell Artists Colony Fellowship • Finalist for the New Century Writers Screenplay Award • Finalist for the Beverly Hills Theater Guild/Julie Harris Playwright Award • Ruby Lloyd Apsey Playwriting Award from the University of Alabama at Birmingham • MacDowell Artists Colony Fellowship


Books
  • The Luckiest Man in the World, short stories (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1984, winner of Drue Heinz Literature Prize).
  • Excelsior, novel (New York: Henry Holt, 1988).
  • Under the Rainbow, novel (Sag Harbor: Permanent Press, 1993).
  • An Occasional Hell, novel (Sag Harbor: Permanent Press, 1993).
  • Dead Man Falling, novel (New York: Carroll & Graf, 1996).
  • Mysticus, novel (Los Angeles: Wolfhawk Books, 1999).
  • On Night's Shore, novel (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2000).
  • Disquiet Heart, novel (New York: St. Martin's Minotaur, 2002). Also published as Doubly Dead, novel (2004)
  • North of Unknown: Mina Hubbard's Extraordinary Expedition into the Labrador Wilderness, nonfiction (New York: The Lyons Press, 2005). Originally published as Heart So Hungry (Knopf Canada 2004)
  • In a Town Called Mundomuerto, novel (Omnidawn Books, 2007)
  • Hangtime, A Confession, novel (Kitsune Books, 2009)
  • The Boy Who Shoots Crows, novel (Penguin/Berkley, 2011)
  • Flying Fish, novel (PS Publishing UK, 2012)
  • Blood & Ink, novel (Kindle Scout, 2015)
  • Two Days Gone, novel (Sourcebooks, 2017)
  • Only the Rain, novel (Thomas & Mercer, 2017)
  • Walking the Bones, novel (Sourcebooks, 2018)
  • First the Thunder, novel (Thomas & Mercer, 2018)
  • A Long Way Down, novel (Sourcebooks, 2019)
  • No Woods So Dark as These, novel (Sourcebooks, 2020)
  • My Secret Life, short story collection (Two Suns Books, 2021)
  • From the Mirror, Reflections on Living, Writing, and Dying Well, memoir (Two Suns Books, 2021)
  • Marguerite & the Moon Man, novel (Amazon Vella, 2021)
  • When All Light Fails, novel (Sourcebooks, 2021)
  • The Deepest Black, novel (Sourcebooks, 2022)
  • Ten Easy Steps to Becoming a Writer (Two Suns Books 2024)

References

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  • www.randallsilvis.com
  • Author Randall Silvis - YouTube
  • Contemporary Authors Online. The Gale Group, 2006. PEN (Permanent Entry Number): 0000091276.