In 1999, Gay published his first novel,
The Long Home. Gay was recognized and marketed as "the real thing," a new
Larry Brown. The novel won the 1999 James A. Michener Memorial Prize and sold well enough to start a bidding war for his second novel.
Provinces of Night was published in late 2000 and confirmed Gay's knack for storytelling. It formed the basis for the
2010 independent film Bloodworth. In 2002, Gay published a collection of stories,
I Hate to See That Evening Sun Go Down, and in 2006 Gay's third novel,
Twilight was published. With its story of a kinky undertaker who hires a hitman to kill a nosy teenager,
Twilight is Gay's most straightforward
Southern Gothic novel. Gay's stories have been anthologized extensively, and as well as his fictional work, Gay frequently contributed essays on music to magazines such as
Paste and
Oxford American. William Gay was named a 2007 USA Ford Foundation Fellow and awarded a $50,000 grant by
United States Artists, a public charity that supports and promotes the work of American artists.
Lost works In 2015, it was announced that two of his lost novels had been found and would be published:
Little Sister Death was published in the autumn of 2015, and
The Lost Country was published in late 2016. In June 2017, the novel
Stoneburner was published by Anomolaic Press. On June 30, 2021, his novel
Fugitives of the Heart was published by Livingston Press. On July 17, 2022, the final book from the William Gay Archive,
Stories from the Attic was published by Dzanc Books
. ==Themes==