John Gregory Brown

John Gregory Brown (July 31, 1960 - ) is an American novelist.

Background and education

Brown was born on July 31, 1960 in New Orleans, Louisiana. He received his B.A. from Tulane University in 1982, and his M.A. from Johns Hopkins University in 1988. He is Director of Creative Writing and the Julia Jackson Nichols Professor of English at Sweet Briar College, Virginia, where he lives with his wife, fellow novelist Carrie Brown.[1] After spending the 2015-2016 academic year teaching at Deerfield Academy, he returned to Sweet Briar College.

Work

Brown's first novel, Decorations in a Ruined Cemetery (1994), received broad critical acclaim. In the New York Times, Margo Jefferson praised the books "seductive rhythmic murmur"[2] In The Los Angeles Times, Charles Solomon noted the writer's "great sensitivity.".[3] Reviewing the book for the Chicago Tribune, Charles Larson called the book a "triumph...much of its magnificence is the result of the author's decision to create imaginative voices other than his own," concluding "John Gregory Brown is both the beneficiary of and a worthy successor to our finest Southern writers."[4] The novel received both the 1994 Lillian Smith Book Award and the United Kingdom's 1996 Steinbeck Award, for the year's best novel by a writer under forty years of age.[5]

The Wrecked, Blessed Body of Shelton Lafleur, Brown's second book, was published in 1996. The Los Angeles Times called the novel "John Gregory Brown's gift of grace to us,"[6] and the Dallas Morning News wrote, "John Gregory Brown is a strong new voice in American—not just Southern—fiction, and his work deserves the widest possible audience.[7]

Reviewing Brown's third novel, Audubon's Watch (2002), in the New York Times, novelist Stewart O'Nan praised Brown's "ambition and achievement," concluding, "This is a brazen performance that few authors would have the skill or the courage to risk."[8] The novel received the 2002 Louisiana Endowment for The Humanities Award. His latest book, "A Thousand Miles from Nowhere," was released in June 2016.[9]

Honors

References

  1. "Interview With John Gregory Brown". Readers Read. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  2. Jefferson, Margo, "Reflections on Endings And Family Secrets," The New York Times, January 12, 1994;
  3. Solomon, Charles, "Decorations in a Ruined Cemetery," The Los Angeles Times, January 22, 1995
  4. Larson, Charles R., "John Gregory Brown's Novel of Southern Discomfort," Chicago Tribune, January 9, 1994.
  5. The Times (London), "Steinbeck Prize," July 16, 1996.
  6. Schulian, John, "Hunted Down By Sadness," The Los Angeles Times, April 7, 1996.
  7. Pilkington, Tom, "Making It Up:Mysterious, crippled Shelton spins a parable of creativity," The Dallas Morning News, April 7, 1996.
  8. O'Nan, Stewart (2001-09-23). "Dying Confessions". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  9. Bass, Erin Z. (2016-07-27). "Miles From Home With John Gregory Brown". Deep South Magazine.
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