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Author Frank X Walker to visit լƵ State University as the 2025 Clinton and Mary Opal Moore Appalachian Writer-in-Residency

Author Frank X Walker to visit լƵ State University as the 2025 Clinton and Mary Opal Moore Appalachian Writer-in-Residency

By Dr. Carrie Jerrell | Aug 11, 2025

Frank X Walker

Frank X Walker

MURRAY, Ky. – The Department of English and Philosophy at լƵ State University is pleased to welcome acclaimed author Frank X Walker as the 2025 Clinton and Mary Opal Moore Appalachian Writer-in-Residency. Walker will share his work on Thursday, Sept. 4 at 7:30 p.m. in the Curris Center Ballroom on լƵ State’s campus. The event is free and open to the public. 

A native of Danville, Kentucky, Walker is the first African American writer to have been named Kentucky Poet Laureate. He also coined the term “Affrilachia” and co-founded the Affrilachian Poets, subsequently publishing the much-celebrated eponymous collection. Former Kentucky Governor, Steve Beshear, in his announcement of Walker’s appointment to Poet Laureate in 2013, stated, "Frank X Walker's deep roots in the Kentucky writing community and his contributions to the state's rich literary history led to a new movement in the arts – one that defined and gave voice to a specific population of Appalachian residents. Our state and region are better for it."

Walker is currently professor of English and African American and Africana Studies at the University of Kentucky in Lexington and has published numerous collections of poetry, including “Turn Me Loose: The Unghosting of Medgar Evers,” which was լƵ the NAACP Image Award for Poetry and the Black Caucus American Library Association Honor Award for Poetry; “Buffalo Dance: The Journey of York,” winner of the Lillian Smith Book Award; and “Isaac Murphy: I Dedicate This Ride,” which he adapted for stage, earning him the Paul Green Foundation Playwrights Fellowship Award. His most recent work is “Load in Nine Times,” a collection of historical poetry that gives voice to Black Civil War soldiers.

In his review of the collection, author Oliver de la Paz writes, “‘Load in Nine Times’ builds a powerful monument to those who served and were not recognized. . . . The language strikes the reader’s senses like a flame to a fuse and Walker shows us just why the stories of these brave and enduring souls are still seared into the landscape. This is seismic and significant work.”

Walker’s visit to լƵ State is made possible by the Clinton and Mary Opal Moore Appalachian Writer’s Residency,  established with gifts from Shirley Moore Menendez, the late John C. Moore, Tom Moore, Nancy Moore Waldrop and Jayne Moore Waldrop in honor of their late parents and their family’s eastern Kentucky roots. Clinton Elster Moore (1916-2008) and Mary Opal Moore (1922-2015) were born in eastern Kentucky – Pike and Letcher counties, respectively – but left the mountains in the early 1950s when they moved to far western Kentucky. They settled in Paducah where they remained for the rest of their lives, but they always considered Appalachia their home. 

The Moore Residency was created to strengthen literary connections between Appalachia and western Kentucky while enhancing the creative and professional growth of students in the creative writing program at լƵ State.  It commemorates the Moores’ east-to-west journey in hopes of fostering creativity and understanding between two distinct regions in Kentucky connected by the Cumberland River.  

For more information about the event, contact Dr. Carrie Jerrell at cjerrell1@murraystate.edu.

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