Kent Gramm’s fiction, nonfiction, and poetry offer unique perspectives on transcendence, history, nature, and contemporary life. Merging varied fields of knowledge, his books contain insight into the past and the present.
November (nominated for the Pulitzer Prize) combines biography, autobiography, history, spirituality, and philosophy, following Abraham Lincoln through the days of November, 1863, and America through one hundred years of Novembers into the postmodern world;
Bitterroot tells a Native American story of racial, religious, and cultural conflict that colors our society today;
Nature’s Bible matches photographic images with poignant and funny observations by our fellow creatures on some of humanity’s most sacred scripture;
Gettysburg: The Living and the Dead speaks with four score and seven voices of a present, past and a haunted future;
The Civil War narrative Sharpsburg tells the story of America’s bloodiest day in terms that still resonate today.
With advanced degrees in literature, American Studies, and theology from the University of Wisconsin and Princeton Theological Seminary, Gramm has taught generations of students in the U. S. and Germany. He is a popular lecturer to audiences at Civil War round tables, churches, and universities.