Obit: Larry Brown

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Mississippi author Larry Brown dead at 53; novels include Big Bad Love, Joe
OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — Author Larry Brown, who wrote about the often rough, gritty lives of rural southerners, died Wednesday at his home, his publisher said. He was 53.
Brown died of an apparent heart attack, North Carolina-based Algonquin Books announced.
“I’m just paralysed like most people when they lose a loved one they admire,” said fellow Oxford-based author Barry Hannah.
Brown’s novels included Big Bad Love (1990), about marital malaise, and Joe (1991), which teamed a hard-drinking ex-convict with a 15-year-old boy whose father was a drunken migrant worker.
Brown won the Southern Book Critics Circle Award twice.
Brown took up writing while working as a firefighter in his native Oxford. His first published work appeared in magazines and journals, and his first book, 1988’s Facing the Music, was a collection of stories.
His first novel, Dirty Work, published a year later, was inspired in part by his father’s experiences in the Second World War.
Other works of fiction included Father and Son (1996) and Fay (2000). He also wrote several non-fiction works, including On Fire (1993), about his work as a firefighter, and Billy Ray’s Farm (2001), a collection of essays about his life and work as a writer.
“As a writer he had the advantage of growing up in a place where people knew each other deeply, and that showed in his work,” said Oxford Mayor Richard Howorth, who also owns the Square Books bookstore.
Big Bad Love was made into a 2001 film starring Debra Winger and Arliss Howard, who also directed it.
In a 1991 interview with The Associated Press, Brown acknowledged that he paints a dreary and desolate picture of the world.
“I don’t know why all my stuff has such a bleak turn in it, because I’m certainly a happy person,” he said. “I love living and everything that goes along with it.”
Brown did not start out as a writer, only briefly attending the University of Mississippi before working in a series of jobs including carpenter and lumberjack.
He began writing fiction while working as a firefighter with the Oxford fire department, a job he held from 1973 to 1990, when he quit to write full time.
Survivors include his wife, Mary Annie Brown; two sons; a daughter; and his mother.

Huk-L, Wednesday, 24 November 2004 19:12 (twenty-one years ago)

RIP

gygax! (gygax!), Wednesday, 24 November 2004 19:23 (twenty-one years ago)

No shit, this guy was the salt of the earth. The pretense that clings to a lot of those Oxford writers, about writing being such a calling and so difficult and needing another drink, and how talking about being a writer seemed to take up more time than the actual writing-- MFA syndrome, wasn't on Larry Brown. And I just didn't expect this. Very sad. It's been years since I talked to him, and I really regret that now.

Dickerson Pike (Dickerson Pike), Thursday, 25 November 2004 00:46 (twenty-one years ago)

That sucks. He fuckin' rocked. I read all his books.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 25 November 2004 01:17 (twenty-one years ago)

Rest In Peace, Larry.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 25 November 2004 01:17 (twenty-one years ago)

Sad news. Used to run into him frequently at book things, and down at Square Books in Oxford--drank a beer or three with him once and he was completely cool and unpretentious. I don't remember him talking about writing or his books and I never asked him about any of it.

eddie hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 25 November 2004 04:03 (twenty-one years ago)


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