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Tess Collins

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Tess Collins is an American novelist and theatre manager.

Early life

Tess Collins was born in Middlesboro, Kentucky. She received a BA in journalism from the University of Kentucky, where she also studied creative writing with Kentucky Poets Laureate Gurney Norman and James Baker Hall, and with novelist and essayist Ed McClanahan.[1] She received the Oswald Award for Creative Writing,[2] and her first poems appeared in The Wandering Foot, a literary journal published by the University of Kentucky Department of English.[3]

San Francisco

Collins moved to San Francisco in 1979.[4] While working in theater management she participated in the Master Workshops of Bay Area author James N. Frey.[5] Eventually she became manager of San Francisco's Curran Theatre. Best known as an author of novels, Collins has also crafted a nonfiction book and plays and she holds a Ph.D. in theater management from the Union Institute and University.[6]

Suspense thrillers

In 1997, Collins's first novel, The Law of Revenge, was published by Ballantine Books. It concerns a San Francisco attorney returning to her Appalachian hometown, where in her teens she was the victim of a brutal gang rape. Responding to a call from her estranged family, she must defend her brother from a murder charge, but Alma's pursuit of the truth is clouded since the prosecuting attorney was once the boy responsible for her rape. In this novel Collins established what were to become two major themes in her writing: the internal journey of victimized women toward empowerment, and the ambiguous relationships between the natural and supernatural. The second and third novel of her Appalachian thriller series, The Law of the Dead followed in 1999 and The Law of Betrayal in 2003, the third of these being a ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year finalist.[7]

Mythic storytelling

Having previously written commercial suspense thrillers for a mass market publisher, Collins remarked, "I had to choose between writing to the market and writing the stories I wanted to tell."[8] Her previous fiction contained mythic elements, but now she moved further toward what she has termed "myth-based fiction, as opposed to metafiction."[9] The short story, "Scarlet Ribbons," published in Space and Time (magazine) received honorable mention in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror (2004), edited by Ellen Datlow, Kelly Link and Gavin J. Grant.[10] Helen of Troy (BearCat Press, 2012) blends realism and mythic themes to achieve psychological observations, often humorous, on marriage and small town life. Notown (BearCat Press, 2013), the first of the Midnight Valley Quartet, combines graphic realism with magical realism as it traces "a day in the life of a woman who decides to kill her husband."[11] The Hunter of Hertha, the second of the Midnight Valley Quartet, is forthcoming.[12]

Nonfiction

Collins's guide to professional theatre management, How Theater Managers Manage, was published in 2003 by Scarecrow Press. She has also authored articles on writing for Byline Magazine and The Writer,[13] and "Trees at Granny's House," an essay reflecting on her childhood.[14]

Plays

Her first play, Tossing Monte, was produced in San Francisco in 1997.[15] Further works as a playwright include Barbarians and a dramatic version of Helen of Troy.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.bearcatpress.com/PDF/TessCollinsQ&A.pdf
  2. ^ Terry White, Justice Denoted: The Legal Thriller, p 71. https://books.google.com/books?id=9e7dQgwiswwC&pg=PA71&lpg=PA71&dq=%22tess+collins%22+oswald+creative&source=bl&ots=0Asy-fD5DL&sig=m7qIocIbdZygfCMFw_0Z1eTjyjA&hl=en&sa=X&ei=JGI3Uu2FMJT69gTo6oGAAw&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22tess%20collins%22%20oswald%20creative&f=false
  3. ^ The Wandering Foot, vol. 1, 1978.
  4. ^ Ron Hogan, Interview with Tess Collins. http://www.beatrice.com/interviews/collinst/
  5. ^ Thriller Ink. Interview with Tess Collins. http://thrillerink.com/tess-collins-author-interview/
  6. ^ "Author Tess Collins Finishes Trilogy." Attorney News. http://attorney-pr.blogspot.com/2011_06_23_archive.html
  7. ^ The Law of Betrayal, Foreward Magazine's Book of the Year finalist, 2003. [1]
  8. ^ Interview, 2013. http://bookbrowsing.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/an-interview-with-tess-collins/
  9. ^ Interview, 2012. http://www.featheredquill.com/reviews/interviews/collins_int.shtml
  10. ^ Honorable Mention List, The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, 2004. http://www.cith.org/gerard/archive2004-2005.htm
  11. ^ Talk of the Town. Interview with Tess Collins. http://vimeo.com/57567318
  12. ^ Tess Collins web site http://www.tesscollins.com/books.html
  13. ^ Justice Denoted: The Legal Thriller in American, British, and Continental Courtroom Literature. Terry White, ed. 2003. Praeger Publishers, Westport, Connecticuit 71-72.
  14. ^ "Trees at Granny's House" and Articles in Byline and The Writer: Growing Up on Memory Lane. eds. Karen Glaesemann and Devon La Harr. Smalltown USA Press, 2004. Articles: p 170 Trees 75-79 ISBN 0-9749009-0-7 ASIN 0974900907
  15. ^ Peter Stack, "New Playwright Ready to Deal." San Francisco Chronicle, August 7, 1997 http://www.sfgate.com/performance/article/New-Playwright-Ready-to-Deal-2813851.php
  16. ^ Tess Collins web site http://tesscollins.com/plays.html