Melanie Sumner (born December 30, 1963) is an American writer and college professor.[1] She was acclaimed as one of "America's Best Young Novelists" in 1995.[2] Writer Jill McCorkle says, "She comes to her characters with this wealth of knowledge. She's so well-versed in those wonderful little details that make up Southern towns. She has such a rich expanse of her fictional turf wildly varied and yet always occupied with this kind of social manners and morals and taboos."[3]
In her second novel, The School of Beauty and Charm, Sumner portrays an adolescent girl raised in an affluent, Christian-oriented Southern family who struggles under the pressure from her parents to become a “proper young lady," getting involved in alcohol and drugs.[3] It was published in 2002 of Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, now Simon & Schuster.[8]
Her third novel, The Ghost of Milagro Creek, was published in July 2010 by Algonquin.[9] The ghost of a medicine woman called Abuela narrates this story of star–crossed lovers set in a mixed community of Native Americans, Hispanics, and whites of Taos, New Mexico.[9]
Her fourth novel, How To Write a Novel was published in August 2015 by Vintage, a Random House imprint.[10] Its plot pulls from aspects of Sumner's own life, telling the story of a 12-year-old girl who moves to a small town in Georgia after her father dies with her mother who is an English professor.[10][1][11]
Awards
Polite Society was included in the Library of Congress Peace Corps Collection in 2011[7]
"The Monster," Voices of the Xiled: A Generation Speaks for Itself. Doubleday, 1994. ISBN978-1-4177-1088-1
"My Other Life." New Stories from the South: The Year's Best 1994. Algonquin Books, 1994. ISBN978-1-56512-088-4[13]
"My Other Life." Best of the South: From Ten Years of New Stories from the South (1997) Algonquin Books. ISBN978-1-56512-128-7
"The Guide." Living on the Edge: Fiction by Peace Corps Writers (1999) Curbstone Press. ISBN978-1-880684-57-3
"Marriage." Long Story Short: Flash Fiction from 64 of North Carolina's Finest Writers (2009) University of North Carolina Press. ISBN978-0-8078-5977-3[13]
"Good-Hearted Woman." New Stories from the South: The Year's Best 2000 (2000) Algonquin Books, p. 37. ISBN978-1-56512-295-6
"The Guide." After O'Connor: Stories from Contemporary Georgia (2003) University of Georgia ISBN978-0-8203-2556-9
Sumner spent some twenty years as "a Southern expatriate downplaying her accent and poking fun at her roots."[3] She has lived in Senegal, New Mexico, Alaska, and Provincetown.[1] Around 2001, she moved back to Rome, Georgia due to an illness in her family.[11] Her husband David died from Lou Gehrig's Disease in 2002.[1][3] She has two children, Zoë and Rider.[4]