Jack Butler 
Major Works
- West of Hollywood, 1980
- Hawk Gumbo and Other Stories, 1982
- The Kid Who Wanted to be a Spaceman and Other Poems,
1984
- Jujitsu for Christ, 1986
- Nightshade, 1989
- Living in Little Rock With Miss Little Rock, 1993
- Jack's Skillet: Plain Talk and Some Recipes >From a Guy in the Kitchen, 1997
- Dreamers, 1998
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See
2010 Update Below
Biography of Jack Butler
by Shemeka Gillespie (SHS) 1999
Jack Butler is a man whose name says it all. He is what some
people would call a Jack-of-all-trades. He has done, experienced,
and created many things. He has worked as a bread-company route man,
statistical analyst, fried pie man, writer-in-residence, Baptist
preacher, and an assistant dean at Hendrix College in Arkansas.
He is an excellent cook, poet, and novelist. He currently teaches creative writing at the College of Santa Fe in New Mexico. (Crowder)
Jack Butler was born in Alligator, Mississippi, in 1944.
He earned a degree from Mississippi College at Clinton
in 1965 prior to attending Central Missouri State College. He
earned two degrees, one in English and one in math, a B.A. and
a B.S. He worked as a Baptist preacher in Missouri, but he left
Missouri in 1968 to continue his education in Arkansas.
He attended the University of Arkansas and earned his M.F.A.
in creative writing. He then became the assistant dean
at Hendrix College. (Crowder)
Jack Butler has written many books and some of his best books are Living in Little Rock with Miss Little Rock, The Dreamer, and Jujitsu for Christ. Living in Little Rock with Miss Little Rock has
sparked the attention of readers all over the nation. The book
was also nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. If a person doesn't
necessarily like the novel, he/she may like some of his other
works. His novel, Dreamers, is a totally different novel from Living in Little Rock With Miss Little Rock. Dreamers
contains a vampire and other scenes that can make the reader’s hair
stand on end. He has a writing style that can catch the attention
of different readers of all ages.
Although Jack Butler writes novels, he also writes
poetry and paints pictures. In addition, Jack Butler recently
published a cookbook that is good for the body and soul entitled,
Jack's Skillet: Plain Talk and Some Recipes From a Guy in the
Kitchen. Jack Butler now continues his life in New Mexico.
UPDATE
2010: Butler held the position
of co-director of the Creative Writing Program and Full Professor
of Creative Writing at the College of Santa Fe, New Mexico,
but he retired in 2004 for health reasons and moved to Wyandotte,
Oklahoma. Since then, he has since moved to California.
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Timeline
1944-Jack Butler was born in Alligator, Mississippi.
1964-1968-He
attended his first years of college at Central Missouri State College.
He earned his English and math degrees (B.A. and B.S.). He worked as a
Baptist preacher.
1968-He left Missouri to continue his education in Arkansas.
1980-He wrote West of Hollywood.
1982-He wrote Hawk Gumbo and Other Stories.
1986-He wrote Jujitsu for Christ.
1989-He wrote Nightshade.
1993-He wrote Living in Little Rock With Miss Little Rock, which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, and he served as the assistant dean at Hendrix College.
1997-He wrote his first cookbook called Jack’s Skillet: Plain Talk and Some Recipes From a Guy in the Kitchen.
1998-He wrote the novel called Dreamers..
1999-He served as the co-director of the Creative Writing Program
and Associate Professor of Creative Writing at The College of
Santa Fe in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
2004--Retired and moved to Oklahoma.
2010--Lives in California.
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A Summary
of "The Kid Who Wanted to Be a Spaceman"
by Shemeka Gillespie (SHS)
This
poem is not written in the normal poetry style because it seems to be a
story that is broken up into fragments. The poem tells about Jack
Butler’s life, hopes, and dreams. He tells how he wanted to become a
spaceman, scientist, and how he is a true poet. He describes his radio
that he listened to and the program that inspired him to become a
spaceman. He was so serious about his goal of becoming a spaceman that
he drew plans for his future rocket, started clubs for people who
wanted to go to the moon with him, and came up with ideas on where to
get money from to fund his adventure. In the end none of it happened.
In
this poem Jack Butler also tells about when he first became a
Christian. He was six years old. During a revival service he stood up
to ask if they were having the altar call and the preacher thought he
was coming to the altar, so he became a Christian by accident. He
also describes the church as a shotgun shack made of weathered
rough-cut lumber located in a cotton field.
When he was in the fourth grade, he started to think he was
going to be a scientist because he created a Tyrannosaurus Rex
that was brown on the outside; but when it was transected,
it was different colors on the inside. He soon started to pull
away from science because he said it didn’t mean much
to him. After he left science, he was drawn
to poetry, and he found his true hope in poetry.
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Related
Websites
Encyclopedia
of Arkansas History and Culture online includes biography of Jack Armand Butler..
More
reviews of the Dreamers can
be found here.
Online
"snippet" from Jack Butler's poem The Kid Who
Wanted to Be a Spaceman from Syntax of Things.
Online
poems of Butler's on Hypertexts.
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Bibliography
Abbot, Dorothy, ed. "Contributors." Mississippi Writers Reflections of Childhood and Youth. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 1988. 387.
Cox, James L. "Profiles of Famous and Notable Mississippians." Mississippi Almanac 1997-1998. Yazoo City, Ms: Computer Search and Research, 1997. 114.
Crowder, Ashby Bland. "Jack Butler: Poetry and Life, an Interview." Mississippi Quarterly: The Journal of Southern Culture. Volume XLVI, No. 1 (Winter 1992-93): 3-21.
Shirley, Aleda, Susan M. Glisson, and Ann J. Abadie, eds. "Other Writers of Interest." Mississippi Writers: Directory and Literary Guide. University, MS: The Center for the Study of Southern Culture, 1995. 47.
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