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spacer Rich Merritt during his career in the Marine Corps. (Photo courtesy Merritt)
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Literary homecomings
Season showcases authors with strong ties to Atlanta

By MATT SCHAFER
MAR. 21, 2008
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MATT SCHAFER

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Letter to the Editor

AUTHORS RETURNING TO THE BOOKSTORES that helped launch their writing careers help brighten the spring calendar. Just next week, three writers with Georgia roots and huge lesbian and gay followings kick off an abundant season for literature.

Pulitzer Prize winning author Alice Walker returns to her home state March 25 to speak at Emory University. On March 27, Atlanta novelist and playwright Pearl Cleage returns to Charis Books & More for a reading, and memoirist Rich Merritt reads from his first novel at Outwrite Bookstore & Coffeehouse, where he used to read and watch people approach his first book, "Secrets of a Gay Marine Porn Star."

“I would love to sit at that counter and watch people and their reaction,” Merritt says. “I remember two young guys picked it up, and one says ‘Sure, this guy has some issues,’ and I was like, 'I can’t disagree with that.'”

Merritt's memoir not only made waves, but also put him on the path to leave Atlanta. As the book found its way to success, Powell Goldstein, a top Atlanta litigation firm, released him from a contract. The firm made clear it was because of the behavior detailed in the book, not just because he was gay, Merritt says.

“After 'Confessions' came out, I was unemployable in Atlanta,” he says. “No one wanted to hire me because of the taboo surrounding porn.”

His new book, “Code of Conduct,” follows a fictional gay Marine who falls in love with a Marine helicopter pilot.

Merritt now works as an attorney in New York City, and writes because it’s something he loves.

“I’ve spent so much more money on promoting my two books than I’ve ever made on them,” he says.

MERRITT SAYS MOVING FROM ATLANTA ALLOWED him to find more work and focus on his writing, but Cascade Heights novelist Cleage finds inspiration in her Atlanta neighborhood and at Charis Books & More, one of the oldest surviving feminist bookstores in the country. She has been visiting the bookstore almost since its inception.

“Charis is a place that not only gave us all the books that you could ever want, that you couldn’t find easily anywhere outside of New York, but it gave us the books and a place to get together with other women who were feminist women,” Cleage says. “Charis is a place where I actually feel that I grew into my feminism. That is where I discovered it and was able to nurture it.”

She returns to the store with each new novel, and it's always one of her favorite stops.

“At Charis, what I always find is an audience of bright, conscious women, and a few good men, who understand exactly what I’m talking about,” she says. “It’s like going home ...”

Many of the fans who came to see the reading of Cleage's sixth novel, “Seen it all and Done the Rest,” at the Margaret Mitchell House on March 17, were black women. But Cleage is often surprised by who appears at her readings.

“I didn’t think about it in that way, 'will I get this audience, or will I get this audience,'” she says. “What I’m always trying to do is to tell the stories that I know in as honest of a way as I can. All different kinds of people show up in my books, and I think that is one reason why my readers are all different kinds of people.”

Cleage also reads at Outwrite on April 20.

HALFWAY BETWEEN MACON AND ATHENS LIES Walker’s hometown of Eatonton, a home she has told reporters she never felt comfortable in because of the labels people place on each other. This will be her first appearance at Emory since the university archived her papers in December. The reading, which is expected to reflect a broad swath of her work, is among the highest profile literary events this season.

Outwrite owner Philip Rafshoon says his store has partnered with the Alliance Theater to bring in yet another big name author, but until the final contractual details are in place, he can’t release details.

“It’s going to be big and it’s one of our customer’s favorite authors,” Rafshoon teases.

“That’s all I can say about it.”



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