Peggy Payne

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Born1949 (age 7576)
OccupationAuthor
SpouseBob Dick (psychologist)
Peggy Payne
Born1949 (age 7576)
OccupationAuthor
SpouseBob Dick (psychologist)
WebsitePeggyPayne.com

Peggy Payne (born 1949) is a writer, journalist and consultant to writers. She has written four books and her articles, reviews and essays have appeared in The New York Times, Cosmopolitan, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and Chicago Tribune, among others.[1] Her work deals primarily with religion and spirituality.

Peggy Payne writes novels that focus on the intersection of sex and spirituality. Her most recent, Cobalt Blue (2013) has been published in 5 countries and won a 2014 IPPY for Visionary Fiction. It is probably the only novel to be a book of the month on a Playboy Radio Network program and in the top 100 spiritual books for Kindle.[citation needed]

Payne was born in 1949 in Wilmington, North Carolina. She graduated from Duke University in 1970 and worked for The Raleigh Times for two years before beginning her freelance career, which lasted over three decades.

She was awarded the Sherwood Anderson Award for 2003, given in memory of Sherwood Anderson, author of Winesburg, Ohio.[2] She has received an NEH grant to study fiction at Berkeley, an Indo-American Fellowship to research Sister India (one of her books) in Varanasi, and a North Carolina Arts Council Fellowship.[3]

Her work has been cited in The Best American Short Stories and published in anthologies including God: Stories, edited by Atlantic Monthly fiction editor C. Michael Curtis; New Stories from the South; and Remarkable Reads. An interview with her, "Writing and Revelation," is included in Dale Brown's Of Fiction and Faith: Twelve American Writers Talk about Their Vision and Work.

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