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The Literary Legacy of Jimmy Carter

Essays on the President's Books

Mark I. West Frye Gaillard

$216

Hardback

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English
Rowman & Littlefield
21 December 2024
Jimmy Carter’s expansive body of writing ranges across the genres of memoir, commentary, children’s literature, poetry, and a novel about the Revolutionary War. Editors Mark I. West and Frye Gaillard have assembled a group of award-winning journalists, poets, historians, and literary scholars to reflect on this substantial – and to some, unexpected – dimension of Carter’s legacy. Collectively, these essays, including several by the editors themselves, document a through-line of ethical integrity, perspective, and insight that runs through Carter’s writing – from his controversial trilogy on peace in the Middle East to his personal reflections on his Georgia boyhood. Carter never used a ghost writer. As a result, his distinct voice and point of view comes through in every book that he published.
Edited by:   ,
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 32mm
Weight:   680g
ISBN:   9781538188330
ISBN 10:   1538188333
Pages:   344
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Acknowledgements Introduction: Reflections on President Jimmy Carter’s Career as an Author Mark I. West and Frye Gaillard 1. Jimmy Carter’s Books from His First Presidential Campaign: Why Not the Best and A Government as Good as Its People Mark I. West 2. Reflections on Jimmy Carter’s Keeping Faith: Memoirs of a President Frye Gaillard 3. The Blood of Abraham: Jimmy Carter’s Search for Peace in the Middle East Ben Cohen 4. Finding Our Way Again: An Essay on the Carters’ Memoir Everything to Gain: Making the Most of the Rest of Your Life Charlotte Pence 5. Baptism by Fire: Jimmy Carter’s First Election as Recounted in Turning Point Kaye Lanning Minchew 6. Absorbed in the Wilderness: Jimmy Carter’s An Outdoor Journal Marilynn S. Olson 7. A President’s Poetic Journey: Always a Reckoning Emily Seelbinder 8. The Litle Baby Snoogle-Fleejer: Jimmy Carter’s Story for Children Paula T. Connolly 9. A Firm Foundation: Jimmy Carter’s Reflections on His Life in A Living Faith and Sources of Strength Ronald F. Lunsford 10. Thinking Out Loud: Jimmy Carter’s Thoughts on Aging in The Virtues of Aging and A Full Life Boyd Davis and Meredith Troutman-Jordan 11. An Hour Before Daylight and Christmas in Plains: Jimmy Carter’s Narratives of Home Jeffrey B. Leak 12. A Presidential First: The Hornet’s Nest, Jimmy Carter’s Historical Novel Paula Gallant Eckard 13. Sharing Good Times: Jimmy Carter on Making Lasting Memories Daniel Shealy 14. A Voice Crying in the Wilderness: Jimmy Carter’s Our Endangered Values Michael J. Brown 15. Cri de coeur: Jimmy Carter’s Palestine Peace Not Apartheid Nancy Mitchell 16. Beyond the White House: Jimmy Carter’s Reflections on His Post-Presidency Years Cynthia Tucker and Frye Gaillard 17. A Remarkable Mother: Jimmy Carter’s Tribute to Miss Lillian Kathy Merlock Jackson 18. A Jimmy Carter Sequel: We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land Frye Gaillard 19. Jimmy Carter’s Day-to-Day Life as President: White House Diary Orville Vernon Burton 20. Challenging Patriarchy: Jimmy Carter’s A Call to Action Richard W. Leeman 21. Working with His Hands: The Craftsmanship of Jimmy Carter and The Paintings of Jimmy Carter Frye Gaillard and Caroline Gebhard 22. Swansong: Jimmy Carter’s Parting Gift of Faith: A Journey for All Mark A. Lempke 23. A Selective Bibliography of Jimmy Carter’s Writings Camille McCutcheon Index About the Editors About the Contributors

Mark I. West is a professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where he has taught since 1984. He is the author or editor of over twenty books, including Theodore Roosevelt on Books and Reading (2023) and Theodore Roosevelt and His Library at Sagamore Hill (2022). Frye Gaillard, former writer in residence at the University of South Alabama, is a journalist-historian who has written more than 30 books. His award-winning titles include A Hard Rain: America in the 1960s (an NPR best book of 2018); Cradle of Freedom: Alabama and the Movement that Changed America; and Prophet from Plains: Jimmy Carter and His Legacy.

Reviews for The Literary Legacy of Jimmy Carter: Essays on the President's Books

A huge thank you to the essayists who have curated Carter’s extraordinary body of work in this tribute to a literary life that began with his first campaign memoir, Why Not the Best?. Carter flourished in all forms, memoir, poetry, religion, aging, even an historical novel. It is an honor to add my voice to his long overdue recognition as a writer. -- Eleanor Clift, commentator for MSNBC and The Daily Beast, former White House correspondent for Newsweek Elegant and thoroughly researched, this collection of essays on President Jimmy Carter provides an intimate and inspiring look into the remarkable legacy of a statesman, humanitarian, poet, and writer. TheLiterary Legacy of Jimmy Carter is the sharing of mind and spirit that illumines, to paraphrase John Henry Cardinal Newman, the best that has been thought and said about our 39th President of the United States. A must-read book for every American. -- Sue Brannan Walker, former Poet Laureate of Alabama, and founding editor of the award-winning journal, Negative Capability Press, which published Jimmy Carter’s poetry Jimmy Carter is celebrated for his monumental impact on humanity, but his literary contributions reveal an equally profound legacy. With over thirty books spanning poetry, memoirs, and fiction, Carter’s writing offers an intimate glimpse into the extraordinary breadth of his mind and imagination. The Literary Legacy of Jimmy Carter presents a collection of essays that delve into this often-overlooked facet of his life, offering readers a captivating exploration of the literary dimension of a truly remarkable American figure. -- Patti Callahan Henry, NYT Bestselling author, winner of the Harper Lee Award Jimmy Carter is surely among our most well-read Presidents. Novelist William Faulkner and theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, for example, wrote from a depth of authentic engagement with issues of faith, culture, spirit, and politics that helped engender Carter’s own rare capacity reflected in these pages. Carter’s literary legacy deserves the honor herein. As a white Southern clergyman who came of age in the civil rights movement and has wrestled in that arena ever since, I give special thanks for this volume. -- Doug Tanner, cofounder and former chief executive of the Faith and Politics Institute in Washington, DC Instead of paid speeches, corporate boards and celebrity golf, Jimmy Carter made his living after leaving office writing books, each a reflection of a different part of his astonishing life as a Renaissance Man. These essays illuminate the 39th president's large and eclectic literary output and bolster the broad reassessment of Carter now underway. -- Jonathan Alter, Author of ""His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, a Life""


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