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PublicationsBooks
- Too Close to Call, a novel published by the University Press of
Mississippi, in the fall of 2001.
- Hardwood Heaven, a non-fiction title published by Butler Books, in
2003. Based on the five hour Kentucky Educational Television
documentary Basketball in Kentucky: Great Balls of Fire. Principal
writer.
Journals and Magazines
- "I'll Sleep When I'm Dead," a short story that appeared in
Virginia
Quarterly Review's Spring 1993 issue.
- "Robert Olen Butler," in Poets & Writers magazine, January/February
1995. The article is a 4000 word profile of the Pulitzer
Prize-winning novelist and short story writer.
- "Except There's No Popcorn Stand in a Book," Writer's Digest,
November 1997. A short piece on the relationship between writing and
film.
Newspapers
- More than 60 book reviews written for my hometown newspaper, the
Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader, a number of which were picked up and
run by newspapers across the country, including the Chicago Tribune,
the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Miami Herald, the San Jose Mercury
News, and the Charlotte Observer.
- Numerous reviews and essays on television, as well as longer
articles on subjects ranging from tobacco farming in Kentucky to
1980s gay culture in Lexington, for ACE Weekly.
Study Guides
- A 12,000 word study guide for Peter Carey's novel True History of
the Kelly Gang, for Thompson-Gale Publishing. The guide is in use
nationally.
- Program guide for Kentucky Educational Television's Signature
series, which included a biography and a critical analysis of the
major works of each of three Appalachian authors—George C. Wolfe,
Lee Smith, and Barbara Kingsolver—profiled in the series. The guide
is in use in Kentucky high schools and colleges.
Other Media
Television Basketball in Kentucky: Great Balls of Fire, a five hour Kentucky
Educational Television documentary on the history of basketball in
Kentucky. The documentary covers 1895 to the present, high school
and college, and boys and girls basketball. Researched the subject
and wrote a year by year outline of the history of the game; talked
to historians, sportswriters, officials, athletes and
former-athletes from one end of the state to the other; researched
interview subjects, wrote questions for them, and conducted many of
the on-camera interviews. For post-production, wrote all
narration and voiceovers.
Radio Hosted and wrote all the material for
The Burgoo Review, a weekly
radio program produced and broadcast by WUKY, the public radio
station and National Public Radio affiliate on the University of
Kentucky campus in Lexington. The Burgoo Review featured original
book reviews, essays and author interviews.
Multi-Media Worked with an audio-visual production company and a fabricating
company to produce text for displays, a historical timeline, and
narration for "sound environments" throughout the Kentucky Music
Hall of Fame and Museum in Renfro Valley, Kentucky. Worked with the
board of directors on inductee decisions, as well as on questions
about proportion—how much space ought to be devoted to particular
musicians, time periods, and genres.
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Awards
- 1995—Emily Clark Balch Award. Prize given each year by Virginia
Quarterly Review for best fiction.
- 1995—Al Smith Fellowship. Awarded by the Kentucky Arts Council for
fiction.
- 2001—Al Smith Fellowship for fiction.
Education
- 1997—MFA, Creative Writing, McNeees State University.
- 1993—MA, English, McNeese State University.
- 1990—BA, English, University of Kentucky.
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About My Work |
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"Too Close to Call pulls off
a rare novelistic hat trick with dazzling elan: It
gives us a resonant and vivid fictional landscape .
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"Kelsay is a talented, funny writer,
nimbly working the same turf mined by the likes of
Lewis Nordan and Larry Brown."
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"Michael Kelsay brings a fresh new
voice to contemporary southern fiction."
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"Kelsay's prose combines the best of
(believe it or not) Larry Brown, Mark Twain and
Raymond Chandler."
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"The black humor of this first novel
is both eerie and down to earth. Set in Eastern
Kentucky, this novel both exalts the landscape and
makes humorous and human the people who inhabit it."
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"Kelsay writes like a dream. Too
Close to Call
is chockablock with wonderful characters and strange
couplings guaranteed to offend quite a few readers."
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"[Kelsay] treats us as children of
God, as Cormac McCarthy might use that phrase. His
novel
Too Close to Call is deeply redemptive at its
core."
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Teaching
- 1990–1993—Taught as a graduate assistant at McNeese State
University. Classes included Writing I, Writing II, and Creative
Writing Workshop in fiction.
- 1999–present—Have taught at Bluegrass Community and
Technical College (formerly Lexington Community College).
Classes have included Writing I, Writing II, Business Writing,
and Creative Writing workshops in fiction.
- 2002—Led graduate-level classes and conducted individual
tutorials as Visiting Writer at Florida-Atlantic University.
- 2003—Taught Creative Writing at the University of Kentucky.
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