Philip Gerard (1955 â November 7, 2022) was an American writer, professor, and historian. He was the author of over a dozen books, including both fiction and creative nonfiction, and received the 2019 North Carolina Award for Literature. For more than thirty years, he was a professor in the creative writing department at the University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW).
Born in Newark, Delaware, Gerard grew up there and attended St. Andrew's School in Middletown. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Anthropology from the University of Delaware. He completed his Masters of Fine Arts at the University of Arizona in 1981.
Gerard had a diverse and long-lasting career as a writer and educator.
Gerard was an advocate for the "novelist of history", someone who "awakens an interest in the history that underpins the story".
Gerard's 1994 novel, Cape Fear Rising, brought the Wilmington massacre to public attention. The massacre is also known as the Wilmington coup of 1898 and its history was suppressed for nearly 100 years. Gerard tells the story of this violent overthrow of an elected city government after Reconstruction and during the Jim Crow era. This was America's only coup d'état. The book is credited with sparking a community-wide conversation about the event. Gerard's book was cited in 2006 by the North Carolina government in the <i>1898 Wilmington race riot report</i> (pages 426-428). The report resulted in the 2007 passage of Senate Joint Resolution 1572 in which the State of North Carolina "expresses [its] profound regret...that the government was unsuccessful in protecting its citizens during that time". Further public attention was brought to Gerard's book with the publication in 2021 of the Pulitzer Prize winning book WilmingtonâÂÂs Lie: The Murderous Coup of 1898 and the Rise of White Supremacy, by David Zucchino, and a PBS American Experience documentary, American Coup: Wilmington 1898 released in late 2024.
Gerard's published work spans fiction and creative nonfiction.
Gerard died unexpectedly on November 7, 2022, at the age of 67. His influence as an author and a professor is widely recognized in North Carolina's literary community. His legacy is commemorated at UNC Wilmington through a graduate fellowship in creative writing established in his name