Novelist John Brandon, a 2001 MFA graduate of Washington University's Writing Program in Arts & Sciences, will read from his work at 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 16.
The talk - part of The Writing Program's fall Reading Series - is free and open to the public and takes place in Hurst Lounge, Room 201, Duncker Hall, on the university's Danforth Campus. A reception and book signing will immediately follow.
Brandon is the author of Arkansas, a darkly comic novel about rural drug distribution, which was published last spring by McSweeney's Rectangulars imprint. The story centers on Kyle and Swin, a pair of aimless drug runners operating - on vague orders from a boss they've never met - out of a dilapidated Arkansas state park.
"Brandon lays down a backstory for each character that blisters with such creepy, suffocatingly real particulars, a reader feels stricken to recognize them," notes the San Francisco Chronicle. "He brilliantly evokes the trailer-trash, time-biding cultures of the Southern states: bland, stagnant cities; towns stuffed with plastic, Wal-Mart junk and gimcracks; and the shuffling, dim lives lining the road to hell, along which our anti-heroes speed."
Brandon grew up on the Gulf Coast of Florida and, while writing Arkansas, worked at a lumber mill, a windshield warehouse, a Coca-Cola distributor, and several small factories, including one that produced perfume samples for fashion magazines. His work has appeared in Subtropics, McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, Mississippi Review, The Believer, Words & Images and The Duck & Herring Co.
Duncker Hall is located at the northwest corner of Brookings Quadrangle, near the intersection of Brookings and Hoyt drives. For more information, call ( 314 ) 935-7130 or email David Schuman at dschuman@wustl.edu.
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