


Like the previous selection, this story by African American writer and educator, Anthony "Tony" Grooms (b.


Currently, Grooms is finishing novels about Black Americans in Sweden and school desegregation in Birmingham, Alabama. The Vain Conversation, a novel, is scheduled to be published by Story River Books (USC Press) in fall 2017. Adopted for study in colleges, Bombingham was the 2013 common book selection for Washington, D. Both Trouble No More and Bombingham were selected as All Georgia Reads books. Grooms offers consolation, however, in allowing us to be present at the emergence of a brave and promising talent.” Grooms is a Fulbright Fellow, a Yaddo Fellow, a Hurston-Wright Foundation Legacy Award finalist, an Arts Administration Fellow from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the recipient of two Lillian Smith Awards from the Southern Regional Council. Writing in MELUS, a critical journal of multi-ethnic literature, Professor Diptiranjan Pattanaik said that Trouble No More demonstrates “the insider’s profound knowledge of the history and struggles of African Americans, while consistently managing to circumscribe a breadth of understanding with a tender story-telling art.” Reviewing Bombingham for the Washington Post, critic Jabari Asim wrote, "In its insistence that 'the world is a tumultuous place and every soul in it suffers,' this powerful, resonant novel offers no consolations. His stories and poems have been published in Callaloo, African American Review, Crab Orchard Review, and other literary journals and anthologies. He is the author of Ice Poems, Trouble No More: Stories and Bombingham, a novel. His education at the College of William and Mary and George Mason University led him to a teaching career in Georgia, where since 1995, he has taught creative writing and literature at Kennesaw State University, and directs its M. Writing in MELUS, a critical journal of multi-ethnic literature, Professor Diptiranjan Pattanaik said that Trouble No More demonstrates “the insider’s profound knowledge of the history and struggles of African Amer Anthony Grooms grew up in rural Virginia. Anthony Grooms grew up in rural Virginia.
