
Revised version of award-winning gay book!
Simolke remained in Lubbock after receiving his Ph.D. in English at Texas Tech University. Aside from its educational institutions, people across America know Lubbock for cotton, the American Wind Power Center, the National Ranching Heritage Center, singer Buddy Holly, singer Mac Davis, Dixie Chick Natalie Maines, TTU Women’s Basketball Coach Marsha Sharp, TTU Men’s Basketball Bobby Knight, and much more.
West Texas made the ideal setting for most of the stories that Simolke wrote for The Acorn Stories and for The Acorn Gathering, a collaborative spin-off that raises money for the American Cancer Society. Lubbock resident Shawna Chandler contributed her story “The Flamenco Painter” to The Acorn Gathering and will appear with Simolke, so both authors can sign copies of that book.
Jan Chandler (Austin, Texas), Huda Orfali (Damascus, Syria), Timothy Morris Taylor (Houston, Texas), and Bill Wetzel (Cut Bank, Montana) also wrote stories for that important collection, which features a variety of characters in unusual or challenging situations.
Simolke’s most ambitious work, though, is the science fiction novel Degranon, which chronicles a racially diverse group of people, caught in a battle between two oppressive worlds. Besides creating a history for two worlds and following three generations of characters, this epic adventure sends one of the characters though a doorway in time, where he learns the secrets of Degranon that connect both worlds.
Texas-based author Duane Simolke has received his third Pride in the Arts literary award from StoneWall Society (http://www.stonewallsociety.com/), a resource for gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgendered artists. Simolke received the 2003 Imagination Award as author of the science fiction thriller Degranon.
Simolke was also honored recently by the LGBT resource website Antny’s Place (http://antnysplace.org). He was the Poet of the Month there for both June and July of 2003.
Born in New Orleans on May 28, 1965, Simolke now lives in Lubbock, Texas. Majoring in English, he studied at Belmont University (B.A., 1989), Hardin-Simmons University (M.A., 1991), and Texas Tech University (Ph.D., 1996). He has always loved books and movies, especially science fiction and fantasy.
Simolke wrote the earliest drafts of Degranon during the 1980s, then revised it for its eventual release in 2002. Before Degranon’s publication, Simolke wrote and released three non-genre books: The Acorn Stories; New Readings of Winesburg, Ohio; and Holding Me Together: Essays and Poems.
Degranon was his first novel, and first work of science fiction. The Acorn Stories and Holding Me Together: Essays and Poems both received StoneWall Society Pride in the Arts awards in 2002.
While revising Degranon, Simolke edited and co-wrote The Acorn Gathering. That mainstream fiction anthology is a spin-off from The Acorn Stories, with all author and editor royalties going to fund cancer research.
The alternate universe Simolke created for Degranon features characters that his readers might think of as Native American, African American, Latino, Asian, or gay. In fact, white characters receive only passing references, while gays seem idealized.
Simolke uses his characters to explore gay themes, as well as wider themes of diversity, freedom, and violence.
Though primarily a high-concept adventure, Degranon challenges every reader’s views, perceptions, and prejudices. Everyone who reads it will find it disturbing at times, exciting at times, and ultimately optimistic. In fact, many people will interpret certain scenes, characters, and events in differing ways.
The prolific author already has the next decade or so planned out in terms of his books. He is co-writing a fantasy novel, polishing a second edition of The Acorn Stories, and developing ideas for two Degranon sequels.
Readers can visit http://DuaneSimolke.Com to learn more about Simolke and his award-winning books, or to find a variety of writing resources and LGBT resources. His site also includes Rainbow: Lubbock, a frequently updated online guide that he created in August 1997 for other gays in the West Texas city that he calls home.