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Vance Bourjaily

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Nationality
  
United States

Education
  
Bowdoin College

Role
  
Novelist

Name
  
Vance Bourjaily

Genre
  
Fiction


Vance Bourjaily static01nytcomimages20100903artssubBOURJAI

Occupation
  
Novelist, Creative writing instructor, Newspaper editor, Essayist

Died
  
August 31, 2010, Greenbrae, California, United States

Books
  
The violated, Brill among the ruins, The end of my life, Confessions of a spent youth, Now playing at Canterbury

Vance Nye Bourjaily (September 17, 1922 – August 31, 2010) was an American novelist, playwright, journalist, creative writing teacher, and essayist.

Contents

Life

Bourjaily was born in Cleveland, Ohio to Monte Ferris Bourjaily, a Lebanese immigrant who was a journalist and later became editor of the United Features Syndicate, and Barbara Webb, an American-born features author and novelist. Bourjaily moved several times during his youth. His childhood was spent in Connecticut, Virginia, and New York. Bourjaily graduated from Handley High School in Winchester, Virginia in 1939. After graduating, Bourjaily enrolled in Bowdoin College. With the coming of World War II, Bourjaily became a volunteer ambulance driver from 1942 to 1944. He then served two years in the army from 1944 to 1946. Bourjaily's time in the army was a central theme to many of his later writings. His Arab American themes are explored by literary critic Evelyn Shakir

Bourjaily graduated from Bowdoin College with a B.A. in 1947. While at Bowdoin, he became a brother of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity (Theta chapter). After graduating, he lived for a few years in San Francisco, writing feature stories for the San Francisco Chronicle before moving to New York City in 1950.

Bourjaily married Bettina Yensen in 1946. The couple had three children. His daughter, Anna, along with the daughter's fifth grade classmate, were killed in a 1964 car accident, in which Bourjaily was driving. Yensen and Bourjaily later divorced.

Bourjaily remarried in 1985, to Yasmin Mogul (a former student) and had a son by her. According to his wife, Bourjaily died in Greenbrae, California on August 31, 2010 where he'd slipped into coma just a few days after suffering from a fall.

Bourjaily's son Phil is a columnist for Field & Stream magazine.

Raymond Carver named his only son, Vance, after Bourjaily. Carver was a student at the Iowa Writer's Workshop where he became friends with Bourjaily.

Career

Bourjaily's first novel, entitled The End of My Life, was heavily influenced by Bourjaily's wartime experiences. Critics said that the novel borrowed heavily from the style and tone of Ernest Hemingway. However, the novel was met with praise and was hailed by critic John W. Aldridge as a war novel on the level of Hemingway's Farewell to Arms. Bourjaily's second novel, The Hound of Earth, paints a picture of Cold War America through the eyes of a scientist who helped develop the atomic bomb. His third novel, The Violated, dealt with the themes of violence and alienation. This book was also met with critical praise.

Brill Among the Ruins is Bourjaily's most critically acclaimed novel. The novel was nominated for a National Book Award in 1970 and was praised in the New York Times Book Review.

Bourjaily spent much of his career in academia. From 1957 to 1980, he worked as a creative writing instructor and a professor at the Iowa Writer's Workshop. Bourjaily also worked at several other academic institutions such as Oregon State University, the University of Arizona, and Louisiana State University. At the latter institution, he was their first director of their MFA Program in Creative Writing. In 1978, Bourjaily served as a judge on for the National Book Award's committee to choose the award for fiction.

Selected works

  • The End of My Life (1947)
  • The Girl in the Abstract Bed (1954)
  • The Hound of Earth (1955)
  • The Violated (1958)
  • Confessions of a Spent Youth (1960)
  • The Unnatural Enemy: Essays on Hunting (1963)
  • The Man Who Knew Kennedy (1967)
  • Brill among the Ruins (1970)
  • Country Matters: Collected Reports from the Fields and Streams of Iowa and Other Places (essays) (1973)
  • Now Playing at Canterbury (1976)
  • A Game Men Play (1980)
  • The Great Fake Book (1986)
  • Old Soldier: A Novel (1990)
  • References

    Vance Bourjaily Wikipedia