Joe David Brown: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''Joe David Brown''' (born May 12, 1915 in Birmingham - died April 22, 1976 in Mayfield, Georgia) was a journalist and author, best known for the novel ''Addie Pray'' ...)
 
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Revision as of 12:35, 10 January 2010

Joe David Brown (born May 12, 1915 in Birmingham - died April 22, 1976 in Mayfield, Georgia) was a journalist and author, best known for the novel Addie Pray which was adapted into the 1973 film Paper Moon.

Brown attended the University of Alabama and began his career with the Birmingham Post in the 1930s. In 1936 he was named city editor for the Dothan Eagle. He moved on to positions with newspapers in Atlanta, Chattanooga and St Louis before joining the New York Daily News in 1939.

Brown served in the 517th Parachute Regimental Combat Team during World War II and was awarded the Bronze Star, Purple Heart and the French Croix de Guerre with palm for his service. After the war he returned to the Daily News but also began contributing fiction and non-fiction to the Saturday Evening Post.

Brown's first novel, Stars in My Crown, was based on his earlier short story "Grandpa and the Miracle Grindstone". He was commissioned to adapt the novel for the 1950 film version. In 1949 he joined the staff of TIME magazine as a foreign correspondent, reporting from India, France and England until he left the magazine to become a freelancer in 1957. The film version of his 1956 World War II novel Kings Go Forth opened in 1958.

Brown's comic novel Addie Pray was set in Alabama during the Great Depression. The film, directed by Peter Bogdanovich, starred Ryan O'Neal and his 10-year-old daughter Tatum as con-artist partners. Tatum won an Oscar for best supporting actress, though her part was really a starring role.

Brown died of a heart attack at his home in Georgia in 1976.

Publications

  • Brown, Joe David (1947) Stars In My Crown, New York: Morrow
  • Brown, Joe David (1949) The Freeholder. New York: W. Morrow
  • Brown, Joe David (1956) Kings Go Forth. New York: W. Morrow
  • Brown, Joe David (1956) Grandpa and the Miracle Grindstone (stories)
  • Brown, Joe David and the editors of LIFE. (1961) India. New York: Time, Inc.
  • Brown, Joe David, ed. (1967) The Hippies. Time Life Books
  • Brown, Joe David, ed. (1967) Can Christianity Survive? Time Life Books.
  • Brown, Joe David, ed. (1967) Sex in the 60s. Time Life Books.
  • Brown, Joe David (1968) Glimpse of a Stranger. New York: W. Morrow
  • Brown, Joe David (1971) Addie Pray. New York: Simon and Schuster

References

  • "Joe David Brown" (May 30, 2008) This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape. Alabama Center for the Book/Auburn University
  • "Joe David Brown." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 15 Aug 2009, 12:50 UTC. 15 Aug 2009 [1].