Aliens in the Prime of Their Lives: Wyoming Signatures interview with Brad Watson

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Uploaded by on May 6, 2011

Brad Watson discusses the necessity of fiction and his newest work, "Aliens the Prime of their Lives" with Wyoming Signatures' Jeff Lockwood.
Originally from Mississippi, Watson teaches at University of Wyoming in the MFA in Creative Writing Program. He previously taught at The University of Alabama, Harvard University, The University of California-Irvine and The University of Mississippi, and has held fellowships through the National Endowment for the Arts and the Lannan Foundation.
Wyoming Signatures' Jeff Lockwood is a professor of Natural Sciences and Humanities at University of Wyoming. He teaches philosophy and creative writing.
Produced by University of Wyoming Television, Outreach School
Aired on Wyoming Public Television, as part of Wyoming Signatures in April 2011
Producer/Audio: Mary Jung; Director: Ali Grossman; Cameras: Steve Costin and Cameron Engineers: Todd Lubbers and Jay Ingalls

(Source: UW Press Release)
Reviewers are praising the southern literature heritage found in "Aliens in the Prime of Their Lives," the recent collection of stories written by University of Wyoming English Professor Brad Watson.
The book's popularity comes as no surprise to Watson's readers, who got a taste of his unique southern perspective in Watson's previous works, "Last Days of the Dog-Men," and "Heaven of Mercury," for which he was nominated for the 2002 National Book Award in Fiction.
Writing in Esquire, Daniel Torday notes, "Brad Watson's third book is a clear reminder that Southern literature will always rise again."
Torday continues, "Watson's South is modernized, but it breathes the same gothic, aesthetically precise breaths as the finest Southern writing. The ability of a writer like Watson to emigrate from his South and migrate his Southern sensibility into his writing keeps Southern literature breathing. It's not lost on a reader that Watson himself lives and teaches in Wyoming today, not Alabama or Mississippi."
Boston Globe book reviewer John Freeman ranks Watson's work among the year's best fiction books.
"They (the stories) plainly depict the importance of resilience in a world determined to undermine it," he writes. "Brad Watson's characters foul up their lives, as fathers, as sons, but they keep on."
But Freeman thinks too much is made of Watson writing about the South.
"The setting is the American South, but ... like Welty and O'Connor before him, he simply writes -- and that's why he gets it right."

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  • That's my 3rd cusion!

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