INTRODUCTION:
THE CHARACTER OF PLACE
It is likely that the first person
to write about
Lipscomb - a soldier from
According to historian Samuel Cole
Williams, Lipscomb was the first traveler to keep a journal of his trip to
What is of interest to the
modern-day researcher is where Lipscomb located his land grant:
If indeed John Lipscomb was the
first of the "
John Lipscomb came to Williamson
County 14 years before it became an official entity. In the nearly two centuries since 1799, the
county has been home to an impressive array of historians, novelists and poets.
In compiling this booklet, members
of the Literary Committee were given the formidable charge of defining just
what is a "
After weeks of discussion, members
decided upon a few simple criteria: the
writer had to have lived in
But even without a Robert Penn
Warren,
In our own time, this rich historical tradition has been continued by Virginia Bowman, James A. Crutchfield and Vance Little, as well as Lyn Sullivan Pewitt and Ridley Wills.
Writing is not only an act of
research, of course, but an act of imagination as well. In the 1930's, Christine Noble Govan captured what it was like to be a child growing up in
the South with a trilogy about the Plummer children that remains timeless in
its innocence and humor. Mildred Haun, Bowen Ingram and Wilson Gage continued a peculiarly
southern tradition of exploring character by way of place. In a sense, with all of their fiction, the
place became a major character in their work.
And that place was
The tradition of the novelist is one
continued by Madison Jones and his namesake, Madison Smartt
Bell, both of an area, and yet both of whom transcend it in their work.
In like manner, the poets have also
written about
The booklet here presented is the
second edition, with more than 20 additional authors. Members of the Williamson County Arts Council
recognize that with further research, other authors will be discovered, authors
whose work may be out of print and difficult to find, but work which is
undoubtedly worthwhile. And with each
passing year, it is our hope that more and more young people will want to continue
the writing tradition of
Beginning last year, the committee
decided to recognize one
All art is difficult, and the art of
writing my be the most difficult, whether it be in writing the history of a
county, or the history of a character, or the pain of trusting the
imagination. And all art, whether it be
through the paint brush, the sculptor's tools, the lens of a camera, or the
keys of a typewriter, is a way to truth, and no county nor city nor region is
complete without those who seek - through whatever medium - to tell the truth.
--Bob
Holladay, August 1993, 1994
From
Williamson County Celebrates the Written Word, a publication of the Williamson
County Arts Council, 1994.
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