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Author ready to leave his TV success behind

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“Yeah, everybody remembers that,” Offutt said. “That was my episode.”

On “True Blood,” he wrote a nutria into an exorcism in the script, only to have the production department question the creature’s existence. So he switched it to a possum. When he arrived on the set he found an animal handler holding two of the creatures by the tail: “I love possums. So I went up to her and asked, ‘Why’d you bring two?’ She said, ‘Sometimes the first one’s not cooperative.’ So they had a stand-in possum.”

“Trueblood” producers also asked him to write a scene in which the locals harass a group of vampires by lobbing Molotov cocktails into a house. Offutt couldn’t resist burning down the house. He showed up on location in Shreveport, La., to find a condemned house rigged to burn.

“I tell you what, that was the happiest day I ever had in television,” Offutt said. “I knew they were going to cut it, but I always wanted to burn down a house, so, by golly, I did it. I was hopping around and screaming I was so happy.”

He earned a Writers Guild of America nomination for best writing on that show, so it’s not that TV hasn’t been fun. And like all opportunists, Offutt says he’d try it again if he can stay in Oxford, where he teaches screenwriting at the University of Mississippi.

“That world is so intoxicating and so attractive, and produces such a euphoria, I found myself wanting it,” he said. “It’s like a drug or something. Now I’ve gone through withdrawal or something. OK, thank God, I live in the country in Mississippi, you know, in an old house and I sit in a little room and write what I want to write.”

And when he’s doing that, it usually turns out special.

He’s a graduate and former professor at the University of Iowa’s famed writing program, received awards and grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation and the Lanning Foundation.

In many ways, his published prose forms an influential cornerstone in 21st-century Southern and rural literature, which has been an active area full of young, talented authors over the last decade, along with writers like Daniel Woodrell and the late Larry Brown.


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