Charles Wright (novelist)


Charles Stephenson Wright was an American novelist. He wrote the novels The Messenger, The Wig and Absolutely Nothing to Get Alarmed About.

Early life

Wright was born in New Franklin, Missouri, on June 4, 1932. After the death of his mother, he was sent at the age of four to live with his maternal grandmother, who encouraged a love of reading in him. He dropped out of high school, and his only further education was a brief stint at the Handy Writers' Colony in Marshall, Illinois, taught by James Jones. Afterward he was enlisted in the Army.

Writing career

In 1955, Wright moved to Manhattan, New York, and worked a number of low-paid jobs while writing his first novel, The Messenger, which was published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in 1963. His second novel, The Wig, received positive reviews, with Conrad Knickerbocker calling it "brutal, exciting and necessary" in The New York Times. His third and last novel, Absolutely Nothing to Get Alarmed About, sections of which were previously published as essays in The Village Voice, came out in 1973.