Tim Gilmore is an English professor at Florida State College at Jacksonville (FSCJ) and an author. He founded the JaxbyJax Literary Arts festival and posts on his website Jaxpsychogeo.com.[1] He has written poetry, fiction, and non-fiction books on subjects including the history of Jacksonville, Eartha White,[2] violent crime, island squatter Rollians Christopher, Virginia King, and Ottis Toole.
He conducted a phone interview of Ku Klux Klan bombing survivor and author Donal Godfrey.
He is married to fellow FSCJ English professor Jo Carlisle and has two daughters.[2]
Tim Gilmore has two websites, jaxpsychogeo.comand tim-gilmore.com.
Books
edit- Ghost Story / Love Song: A Collection Of Clues
- Discarded Windows: Scenes Dreamt In Old Glass
- Flights of Crows, Poems, 2002-2006
- Fear, No More
- This Kind of City: Ghost Stories and Psychological Landscapes
- Murder Capital, 8 Stories 1890s - 1980s[3]
- Channeling Anna Fletcher; a nonfiction novel
- Repossessions: Mass Shootings in Baymeadows
- Goat Island Hermit; The State of Florida vs. Rollians Christopher
- Central Florida Schizophrenia (Everything Buried Will Rise)
- The Ocean Highway At Night
- Ghost Compost: Strange Little Stories[4]
Fiction
edit- The Book of Isaiah: A Vision of the Founder of a City, illustrated by Shep Shepard
Non-fiction
edit- The Devil in the Baptist Church: Bob Gray's Unholy Trinity
- In Search of Eartha White: Storehouse for the People
- The Mad Atlas of Virginia King
- Stalking Ottis Toole: A Southern Gothic, he also adapted it as a play and it was staged at FSCJ[5]
References
edit- ^ "Lit Chat With Tim Gilmore". Jacksonville Public Library. October 8, 2020.
- ^ a b Staff Writer. "One of Us: FSCJ professor Tim Gilmore has written a new biography of Eartha White". The Florida Times-Union.
- ^ Delaney, Bill. "Tim Gilmore's new book chronicles FL's 'Murder Capital'". www.thejaxsonmag.com.
- ^ Sims, Madeline. "LibGuides: Faculty Authors: Florida State College at Jacksonville: G". guides.fscj.edu.
- ^ Delaney, Article by Bill. "Tim Gilmore brings the 'Mad Atlas' to the stage". www.thejaxsonmag.com.