Aaron Parrett
Aaron Parrett (born 1967) is an American musician, author, and letterpress printer.[1] Born in Butte, Montana, he earned a PhD in Comparative Literature in 2001 from The University of Georgia. He is currently Professor of English Literature at the University of Providence in Great Falls, Montana.
Aaron Parrett | |
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Born | |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Musician, author, letterpress printer |
Known for | Montana: Then and Now, Literary Butte, and Montana Americana Music |
His first academic book, The Translunar Narrative in the Western Tradition[2](Ashgate, 2004) examined the dream of traveling to the Moon in literature, culminating in the Apollo Program of the 1960s and early 1970s that achieved the millennia-long vision of leaving Earth. A considerable portion of his academic work deals with science fiction. His other works have focused on his home state of Montana, including Montana: Then and Now (Bangtail, 2014),[3] Literary Butte (History Press, 2015)[4] and Montana Americana Music (Arcadia, 2016), for which prize-winning author Smith Henderson wrote the foreword.[5] He won the Montana Historical Society's Peoples' Choice Award for his essay, "Montana's Worst Natural Disaster," about the devastating 1964 flood that killed 30 Native American Indians on the Blackfeet Reservation.[6] As a result of his Montana writings, he has been featured on many radio programs and was a featured guest on Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown segment on Butte.[7] He serves as president of The Drumlummon Institute, a non-profit whose mission is "to promote and publish art and literatures created in Montana and the broader American West."[8]
Parrett is also a songwriter and composer. His first album of original songs, The Sinners (Pizzle Records, 1996) earned critical acclaim (rereleased in 2015), yielding the song "Texas," a song recorded by several artists, including the southern Americana band Stewart and Winfield. His songs have been featured in several Emmy-nominated documentary films, including Libby, Montana (High Plains Films, 2007) and The Naturalist (2004).[9] A lyric from his song "El Cuchillo" is referenced in leading Steinbeck scholar Bob DeMott's Afield: American Writers on Bird Dogs (2014).[10] His most recent recording was a joint effort with IBMA songwriter of the year, Ivan Rosenberg, called Stumbo Lost Wages (Pizzle Records, 2009).[11] He is also co-founder of The Territorial Press, along with master letterpress printer and book artist, Peter Rutledge Koch.[12] The catalogue of The Territorial Press includes Himself Adrift by Matt Pavelich (2016), Curses by Aaron Parrett (2015), and Maple and Lead (2017) by Aaron Parrett, featuring wood-engraved illustrations by artist Seth Taylor Roby.[13] He lives in Helena, Montana, with his wife and daughter.
References
- "Author Page". Archived from the original on 2016-01-26. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
- Fayter, Paul. "Book Review". Isis. 96: 421–422. doi:10.1086/498761.
- "Montana: Then and Now".
- "Literary Butte".
- "Montana Americana Music".
- "Montana's Worst Natural Disaster" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-09. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
- "Anthony Bourdain Appearance".
- "Drumlummon Institute". Archived from the original on 2017-05-10. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
- "IMDB References".
- Demott, Robert; Smith, Dave (2014-11-11). Afield: American Writers on Bird Dogs. ISBN 9781629148533.
- "CD Baby".
- "Territorial Press".
- "Territorial Press".