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Andrew Nelson Lytle (1902–1995)

Author of Bedford Forrest: and His Critter Company

22+ Works 393 Members 5 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Andrew Nelson Lytle

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Lytle, Andrew Nelson
Birthdate
1902-12-26
Date of death
1995-12-12
Gender
male
Education
Vanderbilt University (BA ∙ 1925)
Yale University
University of Oxford (Exeter College)
Sewanee Military Academy
Occupations
novelist
short story writer
essayist
professor
editor
literary critic (show all 7)
actor
Organizations
The Agrarians
The Sewanee Review (editor)
Fellowship of Southern Writers (charter member)
Association of Literary Magazines of America
South Atlantic Modern Language Association
University of the South (professor) (show all 8)
University of Florida (professor ∙ started MFA program)
Iowa Writers' Workshop (instructor)
Awards and honors
Guggenheim Fellowship ( [1940, 1941, 1960])
Kenyon Review Fellowship (1956)
Richard M. Weaver Award (1986)
National Foundation on Arts and Letters grant (1966-67)
Litt.D., Kenyon College (1965)
Litt.D., University of Florida (1970) (show all 7)
Order of the South
Relationships
Warren, Robert Penn (friend)
Tate, Allen (friend)
Ransom, John Crowe (friend)
Davidson, Donald (friend)
Baker, George Pierce (teacher)
O'Connor, Flannery (student) (show all 12)
Crews, Harry (student)
Gerber, Merrill Joan (student)
Brooks, Cleanth (friend)
Sullivan, Walter (student)
Dickey, James (student)
Mims, Edwin (teacher)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Murfreesboro, Tennessee, USA
Places of residence
Sewanee, Tennessee, USA
Madison County, Alabama, USA
Marshall County, Alabama, USA
New Haven, Connecticut, USA
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
Monteagle, Tennessee, USA
Burial location
University of the South Cemetery, Sewanee, Tennessee, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
Startling detail of the De Soto Expedition, Lytle puts us into to heads of the Spanish and by way of Ortiz, a released captive, the Indians. The story is mostly of contradictory righteousness, which slowly leads away from gold lust toward mere survival. The army's approach is appeasment, slavery, torture and slaughter. The violence is numbing and graphic. A key confrontation between De Sota as Governor an a mission of God's, and the head priest, who speaks for God about the strategy of the show more mission. The various authorities of the Indian clans are often set up as counters to De Soto's changing standards of honor.

While mostly from the point of view of a trusted but disgrace soldier, Tovar, Lytle shifts into raw narrative and a few Ortiz stories. The shifts are disjointed, and the jumps from Cutifichiqui to Mauvella to Guachoya are jarring. The novel has more value as history than entertainment. The novel is heavily based on U.S. De Sota Expedition Commission Report of 1939. Reading one of the novel or report should suffice unless the reader is pursuing an academic investigation of the styles and effects of historical fiction.
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½
A Name for Evil. Andrew Nelson Lytle. 1947. Creepy. I found this book on a list of lesser known horror novels around Halloween. Lytle is considered an “Alabama Author” by the Alabama Library Association guidelines, and he was part of the Agrarian movement started by John Crowe Ransom in reaction to H.L. Mencken’s criticism of the South. And the novel is full or descriptions of the rural landscape and farmland. Our narrator has found an old abandoned farm and he and his wife plan to show more recover the land and restore the house. We are drawn into the mysterious sense of danger and evil almost immediately and know that disaster is inevitable. The ghost appears within the first few pages and we are drawn in to see if the ghost wins show less
I would not call this book entertaining; however, it has its merits. Well researched but I think only someone with a doctorate degree in literature and history would fully appreciate this book. I compare it to Deliverance in the fact that a movie version would be more popular. You can tell a poet wrote Deliverance and like Dickey's novel; people that love the movie may not like the book. Bring out the humor of herding pigs along the path of conquest and you might have a screenplay.
In this area of the house are 8 copies of this book.
signed #90
signed #93
signed #57
signed #296
signed #0
signed #88
signed #295
signed #36

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Statistics

Works
22
Also by
10
Members
393
Popularity
#61,673
Rating
3.9
Reviews
5
ISBNs
20
Favorited
3

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