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Richard Gary Brautigan (January 30, 1935September 14 ?, 1984) was an American writer, best known for the novel Trout Fishing in America. Brautigan's work became identified with the counterculture youth movement of the late 1960s, even though he was said to be contemptuous of hippies (as noted in Lawrence Wright's article in the April 11, 1985 issue of Rolling Stone *). Brautigan's eccentric appearance and manner did not help to dissuade this conception of him and his work.

Brautigan was born in Tacoma, Washington, and grew up with his mother in Eugene, Oregon, where they lived in a small shack in a state of poverty. In 1955 he was arrested for throwing a rock through a police station window, supposedly in order to be sent to prison and fed. Instead he was sent to Oregon State Hospital and treated there with electroconvulsive therapy.

In 1957 he moved to San Francisco and married Virginia Adler. Their daughter Ianthe Elizabeth Brautigan was born in 1960, but the marriage broke up soon after.

By the beginning of the 1960s Brautigan had published three volumes of poetry. Throughout the decade that followed, he became greatly involved in the burgeoning San Francisco scene, often appearing as a performance poet at concerts and participating in the various activities of The Diggers. In the spring of 1967, Brautigan was Poet-in-Residence at the California Institute of Technology.

During the 1960s several of Brautigan's short stories appeared in Rolling Stone and were later collected in The Revenge of the Lawn.

From late 1968 to February 1969, Brautigan recorded a spoken-word album for The Beatles' short-lived record label, Zapple. The label was shut down by Allen Klein before the recording could be released, but it was eventually released in 1970 on Harvest Records as Listening to Richard Brautigan*.

Brautigan's writings are also characterized by a remarkable and humorous imagination. The permeation of inventive metaphors lent even his prose works the feeling of poetry. To his critics, Brautigan was willfully naive. Lawrence Ferlinghetti said of him, "I always kept waiting for Richard to grow up as a writer. I never could stand cute writing. He could never be an important writer -- like Hemingway -- with that childish voice of his. Essentially he had a naïf style, a style based on a childlike perception of the world. The hippie cult was itself a childlike movement. I guess Richard was all the novelist the hippies needed. It was a nonliterate age." This negative view of his work from the new literary establishment took hold in the late 1970s and early 1980s, though it could be said that his unpopularity was based on fashion and wilful misunderstanding. "He was a great artist," said novelist Don Carpenter, "I don't think his work has ever been really recognized for its impact. He's unique. His ability to compress emotion into such small space was second to none." Brautigan once wrote, "All of us have a place in history. Mine is clouds."

In 1984, at age 49, Richard Brautigan died of a self-inflicted .44-calibre gunshot wound to the head in Bolinas, California. The exact date of his suicide is unknown, but it is speculated that Brautigan ended his life on September 14, 1984 after talking to Marcia Clay on the telephone. Robert Yench, a private investigator hired by Brautigan's agent to find him and inform him of a new contract offer, found Richard Brautigan's body on the living room floor of his house on October 25, 1984. *

"When the 1960s ended, he was the baby thrown out with the bath water," said his friend and fellow writer, Tom McGuane. "He was a gentle, troubled, deeply odd guy."

Brautigan's daughter Ianthe Elizabeth Brautigan describes her memories of her father in her book You Can't Catch Death (2000).

In April 1994 a Santa Barbara teenager named Peter Eastman Jr. legally changed his name to Trout Fishing in America.

Books


Fiction

  • A Confederate General From Big Sur, (1964 ISBN 0-224-61923-3)
  • Trout Fishing in America, (1967 ISBN 0-395-50076-1) Omnibus edition
  • In Watermelon Sugar, (1968 ISBN 0-440-34026-8)
  • Revenge of the Lawn, (1970 ISBN 0-671-20960-4)
  • The Abortion: An Historical Romance, (1971 ISBN 0-671-20872-1)
  • The Revenge of the Lawn,, (1971 ISBN 0-671-20960-4)
  • The Hawkline Monster: A Gothic Western, (1974 ISBN 0-671-21809-3)
  • Willard and His Bowling Trophies: A Perverse Mystery, (1975 ISBN 0-671-22065-9)
  • Sombrero Fallout: A Japanese Novel, (1976 ISBN 0-671-22331-3)
  • Dreaming of Babylon: A Private Eye Novel 1942, (1977 ISBN 0-4400-2146-4)
  • The Tokyo-Montana Express, (1980 ISBN 0-440-08770-8)
  • So the Wind Won't Blow It All Away, (1982 ISBN 0-395-70674-2)
  • An Unfortunate Woman: A Journey, (1982, but first published in 2000 ISBN 0-312-27710-5)

Poetry

  • The Galilee Hitch-Hiker, 1958
  • Lay the Marble Tea, 1959
  • The Octopus Frontier, 1960
  • All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace, 1963
  • Please Plant This Book, 1968
  • The Pill versus the Springhill Mine Disaster, 1968
  • Rommel Drives on Deep into Egypt, 1970
  • Loading Mercury with a Pitchfork, (1971 ISBN 0-671-22263-5. ISBN 0-671-22271-6 pbk)
  • June 30th, June 30th, (1978 ISBN 044004295X)
  • The Edna Webster Collection of Undiscovered Writings, (1999 ISBN 0-395-97469-0)

External links


1935 births | 1984 deaths | American novelists | American poets | American short story writers | Deaths by firearm | Suicides by firearm | Writers who committed suicide

Richard Brautigan | Richard Brautigan | Richard Brautigan | リチャード・ブローティガン | Richard Brautigan | Richard Brautigan

 

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