Rick bragg biographical information
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University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, professor of writing, 2005--. Some people died, others got broken. He was the second of three sons, a fourth having died in infancy. Bragg, a professor of writing at the University of Alabama, worked for many years as a journalist. Bragg's father, a Korean War veteran who became a physically abusive alcoholic and died at age forty, was rarely present; when he was, he often beat Margaret.
New York: Knopf, 2003.
Most They Ever Had. MacAdamCage, 2009.
My Southern Journey: True Stories from the Heart of the South. Parents– Charles and Margaret Marie Bundrum Bragg. Oxmoor, 2015.
Prince of Frogtown. University of Alabama Press, 2000.
Joint_Publications:
Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story.
... During his tenure at the Times, he lived in and worked in New York, Atlanta, Miami, and New Orleans. "What happened was unexpected: a nineteen-year-old supply clerk was pressed into driving a truck into a war. Bragg had never met his grandfather, as he died the year before Bragg's birth, but he did rely on his own recollections of his grandmother Ava, who lived on thirty-six years after her husband's death.
For Bragg, writing Ava's Man was an opportunity to acquaint himself with the grandfather he never knew and to build a monument to this beloved man.
A writer for Library Journal recommended All Over but the Shoutin' highly for its "honest but unsentimental" style, its "plainspoken and lyrical" effects, and its "telling" details. Married– Lisa Creel; Married– Diane Wells, 2005. In 1992, Bragg was also awarded Harvard University's Nieman Fellowship, which provided tuition-free career development education for working journalists.
Career
In 1980, Bragg was hired as a reporter for the Anniston Star.
For Hartman a maudlin tone, born of "survivor's guilt," enters the writing at points--"but Bragg is good and there's no denying it," she concluded. These friends and relatives had rich tales to tell about Charlie Bundrum, a man who was much loved and admired. Petersburg Times, St. Petersburg, FL, and New York Times, New York, NY.
AWARDS:
Nieman fellowship, Harvard University; Pulitzer Prize for feature writing, 1996, for coverage of Oklahoma City bombing; American Society of Newspaper Editors Distinguished Writing Award (twice); University of Alabama Clarence Cason Award for Nonfiction Writing, 2004.
WORKS:
- All Over but the Shoutin' (memoir), Pantheon (New York, NY), 1997, published as Redbirds: Memories from the South, Harville Press (London, England), 1999.
- (With Walker Evans) Wooden Churches: A Celebration, Algonquin Books (Chapel Hill, NC), 1999.
- Somebody Told Me: The Newspaper Stories of Rick Bragg, University of Alabama Press (Tuscaloosa, AL), 2000.
- Ava's Man (memoir), Knopf (New York, NY), 2001.
- I Am a Soldier Too: The Jessica Lynch Story, Knopf (New York, NY), 2003.
- The Prince of Frogtown (memoir), Knopf (New York, NY), 2008.
Author of foreword, Best of the Oxford American: Ten Years from the Southern Magazine of Good Writing, Hill Street Press (Athens, GA), 2002.
Rick Bragg describes his family's history in an acclaimed trilogy of memoirs, All Over but the Shoutin',Ava's Man, and The Prince of Frogtown. The books not only cover Bragg's personal journey from harsh childhood to national renown as a prize-winning journalist, but also present the stories of his parents, his community, and his relationship with a stepson who was raised in a manner completely unlike Bragg's own childhood.
He now works as a writing professor at the University of Alabama's journalism program in its College of Communication and Information Sciences and writes a column for Southern Living.
Achievements
Rick Bragg is the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer of best-selling and critically acclaimed books on the people of the foothills of the Appalachians, All Over but the Shoutin, Ava's Man, and The Prince of Frogtown.
Since 1995, Bragg has been working as a freelance writer, and since 2004, he has taught writing in Harvard University, the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, Boston University, the University of South Florida, and other colleges.