James A. Autry
Major Works
- Nights under A Tin Roof: Recollections of a
Southern Boyhood (poems), Yoknapatawpha, 1982.
- Life after Mississippi (poems),
Yoknapatawpha, 1989.
- Love and Profit: The Art of Caring Leadership
(essays and poems), Morrow, 1991.
- Confessions of an Accidental Businessman: It
Takes a Lifetime to Find Wisdom
- Life & Work: A Manager's Search for Meaning
- Real Power: Business Lessons from the Tao Te
Ching
- The Servant Leader, 2001
- The Spirit of Retirement: Creating a Life of
Meaning and Personal Growth, 2002
- The Book of Hard Choice, 2006
- Looking Around for God:The Oddly Reverent Observations
of an Unconventional Christian, 2007
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James A. Autry:
A Biography by Kimberly Hill (SHS)
James A.Autry, also known as Big Shelby by his country relatives,
was born in 1933
in Memphis, Tennessee, but he grew up in Benton County, Mississippi,
somewhere between Hickory Flat and Ashland, Mississippi. He
is the son and grandson of Baptist ministers; and his mother
was painter. His brother Ronald also has written a book. Although
Autry went to schools in the city, he was influenced by people
of the Pine Grove Church and Abel's Store community from whom
he learned the values, rituals, and sense of communication that
have been present from generation to generation. After graduating
from high school, he attended the University of Mississippi
in Oxford and worked as a reporter, photographer, musician,
student tutor, copy boy, farm hand, teletype operator, and several
other jobs to pay his tuition. After graduating from the University
of Mississippi in journalism, he served as a jet fighter pilot
in the Air Force in France for four years. After he completed
his Air Force service, Autry entered the newspaper business
and moved on to magazines. Autry's career has lead him to many
prominent positions. He has worked for Better Homes and Gardens,
starting as a copy and manager editor and working his way up
within twenty-five years to become editor in chief. He is now
retired from magazine publishing for Meredith Corporation. He
married Sally Joanne Pederson, also a writer, editor,and former
Iowa lieutenant governor. They have three children: James A.
Autry Jr., Richard R. Autry, and Ronald P. Autry.
Autry
writes much of his poetry on airlines in which he spends many
hours a year in his present job. He says, "I keep thinking
how disconnected it is to travel by jetliner. That technological
womb with its inhumanity made me think about Greyhound buses
in Mississippi. Some of the first poems come from those thoughts."
Autry has won many awards and honors. He was named distinguished
alumnus and elected to the Alumni Hall of Fame at University
of Mississippi in 1981. Later in 1990 he won the Headliner Award,
Women in Communications. In 1991 he received a Litt.D. from
William Jewell College. Also in 1991, Autry received the Missouri
Medal of Honor for distinguished service in journalism from
the University of Missouri-Columbia. Presently James Autry lives
in Des Moines, Iowa, with his wife, Sally. Although now miles
from Mississippi, Autry still maintains strong friendships and
family connections in Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Georgia.
His work, Real Power: Business Lessons from the
Tao Te Ching, is written with Stephen Mitchell,
the bestselling translator of the Tao Te Ching. They write the
first book revealing how to use the wisdom of this ancient text
to understand the most valued and elusive prize in business:
power. In addition, James Autry has started work on Virtues
of the Heart, a collection of enlightening stories
for adults and children; and I Am The Man,
a satirical novel about business.
Autry is dedicated to good business and good writing. His writings
are not only entertaining but stay in the reader's mind. He
was selected by Bill Moyers as one of the modern day poets to
be interviewed for Moyers's The Language of Life
series, which won an Emmy. The distinctive Southern voice of
James Autry will continue to be enjoyed by readers as he returns
to his Mississippi roots in his poetry and his other writings.
UPDATE: James Autry has now published ten books. See Major
Works above for titles.
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A Review of
Nights under a Tin Roof: Recollections of a Southern
Boyhood by Kimberly Hill (SHS)
The book Nights under a Tin Roof
by James Autry is loaded with poems of good times and poems
of bad times. Unfolded therein is life as Autry knew it when
he was growing up in Mississippi. From "Communication"
to "Genealogy," "The Snakes," and "Death
in the Family," we all know these phases of life.
Most of his poems contain someone from his "Genealogy"
family tree. In "Communication" Aunt Callie hollers
over the hills at Cousin Lester, everyone hearing her but they
just think she is just yelling. Aunt Callie would tell the "chirren"
to "watch you'll step on snakes in "The Snakes."
Then Uncle Vee would kill "The Snakes." In "Death
in the Family" people hug, cry, and say "She's with
Jesus now, no suffering where she is." Autry's characters
and their actions and personalities paint a good picture of
Autry's early life in Mississippi as you read his poetry.
Autry's poems are set in Mississippi during the 1940's and
50's. The title itself, Nights under a Tin Roof, tells part
of the setting. Most of his poems' settings relate to the area
of or around this tin roof; events that took place as he sat,
lay, and played on those nights as a Mississippi boy, adolescent,
and then teenager.
Some of his poems contain dialect such as "chirren, ought,
'un and yellin." Some contain words of songs, "We'll
understand it better by and by" and "Shall we gather
at the river, the beautiful ,the beautiful river?" He also
uses actual photographs so the reader can see what he is writing
about. Those pictures really add to his poetry and bring the
reader into the poem. It is almost as if you can hear just what
they are saying.
As I read about him, I found a quotation of Autry's which sort
of sums up the theme of all his poems. Autry says, "In
examining old life, values are still valuable, rituals are more
than chores, and activities and events not only punctuate time
but define themselves."
I really enjoyed James Autry's book, Nights under a
Tin Roof: Recollections of a Southern Boyhood as he
told of life as he knew as a child growing up in Mississippi.
. Now James Autry's poetry stands out vividly in my mind. Never
forgetting his roots, Autry and his writings will continue to
be admired, especially by Mississippians, but also by the many
who consider him a true philosopher/businessman.
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Related
Websites
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Works
Cited
Mississippi Writers: An Anthology.
edited by Dorothy Abbott. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi,
1991.
Autry, James. Nights under a Tin Roof: Recollections
of a Southern Boyhood, Oxford, MS: Yoknapatawpha
Press, 1983.
Autry, James. Life after Mississippi.
Moyers, Bill. The Language of Life.
Contemporary Authors. Vol. 135 .
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