Name Brock Brower | Role Novelist | |
Books The Late Great Creature, Blue Dog - Green River: A, Fires of Faith: The Inspiring, The New Philanthropists and the E |
Brock Brower (November 21, 1931 – April 16, 2014) was an American novelist, magazine journalist and TV writer for various magazines including Esquire, Life, Harper’s Magazine, and The New York Times Magazine.
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Background
The son of Charles H. Brower, Brock Hendrickson Brower was born in Plainfield, New Jersey and raised in Westfield, New Jersey. In 1953, he graduated from Dartmouth College, where he served as managing editor for The Dartmouth. He then attended Harvard Law School but left to study English literature for his MA as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University's Merton College.
Career
From 1956 to 1958, Brower served two years in the U.S. Army in Intelligence at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
In 1959, he joined Esquire, for which he wrote profiles of Alger Hiss, Norman Mailer, and Mary McCarthy.
He also wrote profiles of vice presidents Spiro T. Agnew and Walter F. Mondale. He profiled presidential candidates including Hubert Humphrey, Richard Nixon, George W. Romney, and Eugene McCarthy. He was writing about Ted Kennedy just before the Chappaquiddick incident in 1969.
In the late 1970s, he "helped originate" the ABC News program 20/20 for Hugh Downs and for 3-2-1 Contact (a science show produced by the Children’s Television Workshop).
From 1989 to 1991, he was a speechwriter for Attorney General Richard Thornburgh.
From 1996 to 2006, he taught journalism at Dartmouth College in Hanover, NH, and was a writer-in-residence at Princeton University.
Personal life and death
In 1956, he married Ann Montgomery, an American fashion model, in Paris.
Brower died of cancer in Santa Barbara, California, on April 16, 2014, at age 82.
Survivors include his wife, five children (Monty, Emily, Elizabeth, Margaret, and Alison), brother Charles, five grandchildren. He was predeceased by Anne C. Brower, bone radiologist and Episcopal priest.
Awards
Awards made to Brower include:
His 1972 comedic novel The Late Great Creature was nominated for the National Book Award for Fiction.