Steven Ford Brown: Difference between revisions

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He left ''The Paperman'' in [[1975]] to become editor of ''Aura Literary Arts Review'' at The University of Alabama at Birmingham, publishing work by Yukio Mishima (Japan), Diane Wakoski, and features on Robert Bly, Howard Nemerov, the American Prose Poem and Southern culture and literature. The same year he also founded a small literary press, [[Thunder City Press]], which eventually became Ford-Brown & Co., Publishers, and continued to publish books until [[1995]]. Over a twenty-year period his two publishing houses published anthologies, broadsides, chapbooks, books and magazines.
He left ''The Paperman'' in [[1975]] to become editor of ''Aura Literary Arts Review'' at The University of Alabama at Birmingham, publishing work by Yukio Mishima (Japan), Diane Wakoski, and features on Robert Bly, Howard Nemerov, the American Prose Poem and Southern culture and literature. The same year he also founded a small literary press, [[Thunder City Press]], which eventually became Ford-Brown & Co., Publishers, and continued to publish books until [[1995]]. Over a twenty-year period his two publishing houses published anthologies, broadsides, chapbooks, books and magazines.


[[Image: File:Bham anthology.jpg|left|thumb|Contemporary Literature in Birmingham 1983]]
[[Image:Bham anthology.jpg|left|thumb|Contemporary Literature in Birmingham, 1983]]





Revision as of 10:34, 17 February 2015

Steven Ford Brown in 1983. Photo by Dennis Harper

Steven Ford Brown (born September 11, 1952 in Florence (Lauderdale County), Alabama, is a journalist, music critic, publisher and translator, currently living in Boston, Massachusetts. He is the founder and Managing Director of The Official Tomas Tranströmer Website, a website dedicated to the life and work of the 2011 Nobel Prize winner for Literature.

Of French and Scottish descent, Brown is the son of Ford Brown (a Marine veteran of World War II and sales executive) and Gloria Peters (a housewife). As a high school student in Birmingham he became interested in the San Francisco Beatnik literature of the 1950s and '60s and the music of the British Invasion bands of the era. He completed his bachelor's in English and Literature in 1992 at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He has has also studied at the University of Houston and Harvard University's Extension School.

In 1973 Brown moved to Birmingham’s Southside, a community just below Red Mountain and ten minutes from the downtown area of Birmingham where the most violent confrontations of the Civil Rights era took place. Not unlike New York City's Greenwich Village and San Francisco's Haight Ashbury during the 1960s, Southside, in stark contrast to the Civil Rights battleground in downtown Birmingham, was home to a tolerant alternative artistic, cultural and lifestyle scene. The Southside community featured an alternative newspaper The Paperman, a Buddhist styled natural foods store Golden Temple Health Foods, Society's Child, a folk music oriented coffeehouse, several communes, an alternative culture headshop, a free medical clinic, the Charlemagne Record Exchange, The Garages art studios and the Red Mountain Alternative School.

Brown began his literary affiliations on Southside by joining a loose congregation of artists, writers and musicians who gathered and lived at the Cobb Lane Studios, a collection of apartments and studios above the Cobb Lane Restaurant on 20th Street. He began a writing career in earnest with The Paperman as an occasional journalist, books and literary editor and music reviewer. He created and edited for the paper an original series of features and profiles of American artists and writers that included Diane Arbus, John Beecher, Charles Bukowski, Allen Ginsberg, Richard Hugo, Diane Wakoski and Poets against the Vietnam War. During this period on Southside he also met artists Frank Fleming, Dennis Harper and Nall, bookstore owner Joe Simpson, and poet John Beecher and his wife Barbara.

He left The Paperman in 1975 to become editor of Aura Literary Arts Review at The University of Alabama at Birmingham, publishing work by Yukio Mishima (Japan), Diane Wakoski, and features on Robert Bly, Howard Nemerov, the American Prose Poem and Southern culture and literature. The same year he also founded a small literary press, Thunder City Press, which eventually became Ford-Brown & Co., Publishers, and continued to publish books until 1995. Over a twenty-year period his two publishing houses published anthologies, broadsides, chapbooks, books and magazines.

File:Bham anthology.jpg
Contemporary Literature in Birmingham, 1983


With Birmingham writer Danny Gamble in 1980 he founded the Old Town Music and Reading series on Morris Avenue off of 20th Street North in downtown Birmingham. The founding of this performance series was the culmination of a number of years of sponsorship by Brown of conferences, readings and music performances by Birmingham artists. Brown and Gamble coordinated with Drew Tombrello, owner of The Old Town Music Hall, to present performances to packed audiences three times a year. Performers included many local musician and writers, such as The Broken Hearts, Johnny Coley, Lolly Lee, Charles Muse, The Ray Reach Group, Dale Short, Michael Swindle and Macey Taylor. There were also periodic performances and readings by such notable musicians and writers as Mose Allison, Michael Harper, Philip Levine, Larry Levis, Shirley Williams and Larry Jon Wilson.

In 1983 Brown left Birmingham and moved to Houston, Texas. While in Texas he served as a Board Member of the Houston Poetry Festival and as Director of Research for the George Plimpton interview series, The Writer in Society, that in 1984 appeared on the Channel 8 PBS affiliate in Houston, Texas, and featured interviews with Maya Angelou, John Barth, Donald Barthelme and Bobbie Anne Mason. His own research for the series was on the short fiction and novels of Barthelme. It was during this time that he met and edited a book of literary criticism on former Texas poet Laureate Vassar Miller. Heart's Invention (1988) included an introductory essay by screenwriter Larry McMurtry. Brown began translating the work of Spanish poet Ángel González which resulted in the publication of Astonishing World: The Selected Poems of Ángel González, 1956-1986 (Milkweed Editions, 1992).

Brown has contributed writing to The Christian Science Monitor, The Harvard Review, Poetry magazine, Rolling Stone, Jacket and Verse. He edited a volume of poems by John Beecher and co-edited an anthology of contemporary Southern poets.

After moving to Texas, Brown worked as a researcher for a local public television station and began translating the works of Spanish poet Ángel González. His Astonishing World: The Selected Poems of Ángel González, 1956-1986 was published by the non-profit Milkweed Editions in 1992. He followed that with translations of Nicomedes Suarez Arauz, Jorge Carrera Andrade, and Juan Carlos Galeano. He edited two special issues of the Atlanta Review focusing on Latin American and Spanish poetry and has been involved in Alan Cordle's "Foetry" campaign against the institutionalization of American poetry awards.

Now residing in Boston, Massachusetts, Brown worked for Wellington Management, a private investment firm, from 1998 to 2006. He resigned to resume working as a writer and editor. He now writes for "Boxing Herald.com" and the "Boston Music Spotlight". He was awarded a residency at the Swedish Writers Union in Stockholm, Sweden and was a featured speaker at a 2009 conference on Harriet Beecher-Stowe and John Beecher at the Université Paul Valéry in Montpellier III, France. Brown founded the Lion Publishing Group

Bibliography (Books)

International

  • Microgramas, Jorge Carrera Andrade, Orogenia Corporacion Cultural: Quito, Ecuador, 2007

United States

  • One More River To Cross: The Selected Poems of John Beecher, New South Books , 2003
  • Century of The Death of The Rose: The Selected Poems of Jorge Carrera Andrade, New South Books , 2002
  • Edible Amazonia: Twenty poems from God's Amazonian Recipe Book, Nicomedes Suarez Arauz, Bitter Oleander Press, 2002
  • Invited Guest: An Anthology of Twentieth Century Southern Poetry, University of Virginia Press, 2001
  • Astonishing World: The Selected Poems of Ángel González, 1956-1986, MN: Milkweed Editions, 1993
  • Heart’s Invention: On The Poetry Of Vassar Miller, Ford-Brown & Co., Publishers, 1988
  • Contemporary Literature in Birmingham: An Anthology, Birmingham Public Library/ Thunder City Press, Birmingham, AL,1983

References

Related Websites