Andrew Lytle Article Index for
Andrew
Website Links For
Andrew
 

Information About

Andrew Lytle




Like both Tate and Warren, his first published book-length work was a biography. "Bedford Forrest and his Critter Company" (1931), is considered the classic biography of American Civil War General Nathan Bedford Forrest . Lytle went on from there to write more than a dozen books -- including novels, collections of essays on literary and cultural topics, and collected short stories. Most critics consider 1957's "The Velvet Horn" to be his greatest work. It won the National Book Award for fiction. His 1973 memoir, "A Wake For The Living," is a tour-de-force in Southern storytelling, combining a deep religious sensibility, an expansive view of history that links events across decades and even centuries, and -- sometimes -- bawdy family tales.

Lytle served as editor of the '' Sewanee Review '' from 1961 to 1973 as a professor at the University Of The South . It was during Lytle's tenure that the ''Review'' rose in prominence to one of the nation's most prestigious literary magazines. Lytle was an early champion of the work of Flannery O'Connor. Indeed, many writers -- including Tate and Warren, but also Elizabeth Bishop, Carolyn Tate, and Robert Lowell -- were encouraged and often had their writing improved by Lytle's insightful criticism.

Lytle also taught literature and creative writing at the University of Florida, where Harry Crews was a student.

Though Lytle retired from the University of the South in 1973, he never fully retired from either writing or teaching. In the last years of his life he had what he called the "great pleasure" of seeing most of his earlier books come back into print, and several university presses collected his stories and essays.

A warm and hospitable host, and an irrepressible raconteur, Lytle spent the last 20 years living in a cabin in Monteagle, Tennessee , not far from the campus of the University of the South. A trip to the cabin became a kind of pilgrimage for many writers, teachers, and scholars.

He lived in the cabin until his death in 1995.