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A Distant Flame
Philip's most recent book from Mercer University Press.

Philip Lee Williams releases free web-only version of large-scale orchestral work, Holocaust Symphony.

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Biography
Philip Lee Williams
Click Here for curriculum vitae (PDF) 

Philip Lee Williams is the author of 12 published books, including nine novels and two works of non-fiction. His books have been published by such presses as W. W. Norton, Random House, Grove Press, Ballantine, Dell, Viking/Penguin, and the University of Georgia Press, as well a number of other smaller presses.

His latest novel, A Distant Flame, was published in the Fall of 2004 by St. Martin’s Press.

His books have been translated into Swedish, German, French, and Japanese and have appeared in large-print editions as well. A number of his books have been optioned for film by such people as producer Richard Zanuck, director Ron Howard, and actress Meg Ryan. He was hired by M-G-M to write the screenplay of his own book, All the Western Stars, though the movie has not yet been made.

Two of Williams’s unpublished manuscripts have also been optioned by producers in Hollywood.

Williams has also published poetry in more than 40 magazines, including Poetry, Press, the Cumberland Poetry Review and many others. He has published essays and short stories, and one story, “An Early Snow,” published in 2000, was nominated by The Chattahoochee Review for a Pushcart Prize.

In addition, he is a prize-winning documentary film writer and producer. Three of his films have been shown multiple times on Georgia Public Television, and he has won awards for them the New York Film Festival, the Columbus (Ohio) Film Festival, and from the Telly Awards. He is a winner of the Townsend Prize for Fiction for his first novel, The Heart of a Distant Forest, and in 1991 was named Georgia Author of the Year for Fiction.

In a journalistic career for Georgia newspapers, he published more than a thousand feature stories and some 500 personal columns. After coming to the University of Georgia in 1985 as a science writer, he won numerous awards for his work, and is the only writer to have won the top feature writing award two years in a row for the Southeastern United States from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.

The University of Georgia has listed him for some years as one of its “notable graduates,” and he is the only one on that list who works (or has ever worked) for UGA itself. He is a member of the Graduate Faculty at UGA and director of public information for the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

His work has been included in several anthologies, and in 2001 he was named to Who’s Who in America for his literary accomplishments. He is a 1972 graduate of the University of Georgia.