The highly acclaimed memoir of one of the most original American storytellers of the rural South A Penguin Classic Harry Crews grew up as the son of a sharecropper in Georgia at a time when "the rest of the country was just beginning to feel the real hurt of the Great Depression but it had been living in Bacon County for years." Yet what he conveys in this moving, brutal autobiography of his first six years of life is an elegiac sense of community and roots from a rural South that had rarely been represented in this way. Interweaving his own memories including his bout with polio and a fascination with the Sears, Roebuck catalog, with the tales of relatives and friends, he re-creates a childhood of tenderness and violence, comedy and tragedy.
The highly acclaimed memoir of one of the most original American storytellers of the rural South A Penguin Classic Harry Crews grew up as the son of a sharecropper in Georgia at a time when "the rest of the country was just beginning to feel the real hurt of the Great Depression but it had been living in Bacon County for years." Yet what he conveys in this moving, brutal autobiography of his first six years of life is an elegiac sense of community and roots from a rural South that had rarely been represented in this way. Interweaving his own memories including his bout with polio and a fascination with the Sears, Roebuck catalog, with the tales of relatives and friends, he re-creates a childhood of tenderness and violence, comedy and tragedy.
Harry Crews was born in 1935 at the end of a dirt road in Alma,
Bacon County, Georgia, a rural community near the Okefenokee Swamp.
His father, a tenant farmer, died before Harry was two years old. A
mysterious childhood paralysis; a horrible scalding accident; his
mother's second, turbulent marriage and divorce from a drunken
uncle whom Crews had been led to believe was his natural father;
and a move to Jacksonville, Florida, for his mother to find factory
work were experiences that would feed his desire to imagine and,
ultimately, to write. As a teen, Crews served a tour in the Marine
Corps. On the GI Bill, Crews attended the University of Florida,
where he earned a bachelor's degree in literature followed by a
master's in education, with which he taught high-school and
junior-college English. A protege of Southern novelist Andrew
Lytle, Crews published his first short story in the Sewanee Review
in 1962. He published his first novel, The Gospel Singer, in 1968.
Its publication earned Crews a new teaching job at the University
of Florida and paved the way for the publication of seven more
novels over the next eight years, including Naked in Garden Hills
(1969); Car (1972); The Hawk Is Dying (1973), which was adapted
into a film released in 2006; The Gypsy's Curse (1974); and the
widely acclaimed A Feast of Snakes (1976). Crews's reputation as a
bold and daring new voice in Southern writing grew during this
time. In the 1970s, he wrote for popular magazines, including a
monthly column for Esquire and essays for Playboy, and screenplays.
In 1978, Crews's memoir of his youth, A Childhood- The Biography of
a Place, was published to enduring acclaim. Two compilations of his
nonfiction works, Blood and Grits and Florida Frenzy, were issued
in 1979 and 1982, respectively. A decade of drug and alcohol abuse
and creative lapses ended in 1987 with the publication of his ninth
novel, All We Need of Hell. Crews retired from the classroom after
teaching for thirty years at the University of Florida in
Gainesville. Crews, who died in 2012 at age seventy-six, was a
prominent writer in the literary genre known as Dirty South or Grit
Lit, notable for its bizarre characters, grotesque violence, and
satirical surrealism. His artistic forebears include William
Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor, and Erskine Caldwell, but Crews remade
Southern gothic in his own rough-hewn image in eighteen memorable
novels, including Karate Is a Thing of the Spirit (1971), The
Knockout Artist (1988), and Body (1990), dozens of riveting
nonfiction pieces, and one of the finest memoirs in American
literature. In 2002, the University of Georgia Libraries inducted
Harry Crews into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame.
Tobias Wolff (foreword) is the author of the novels The Barracks
Thief and Old School, the memoirs This Boy's Life and In Pharaoh's
Army, and the short story collections In the Garden of the North
American Martyrs, Back in the World, and The Night in Question.
Wolff has received the PEN/Malamud Award, the Rea Award, the Los
Angeles Times Book Prize, the PEN/Faulkner Award, and in 2015, the
National Medal of Arts.
“Reading Crews, I found the courage to tell the stories I’d been
amassing my whole life.”
—Mary Karr
“This memoir is for everyone. It’s agile, honest and built as if to
last. Like its author, it’s a resilient American original.”
—Dwight Garner, The New York Times
“…the memoir is flawless, one of the finest ever written by an
American….[it] answers some specific questions, namely where its
author came from and how he became a writer, but it asks broader
ones, too: why anyone becomes anything, how we square our pasts
with our futures, and why certain things—a book, its author—are
rescued from oblivion.”
—Casey Cep, The New Yorker
“Critics and awards anoint some authors as legends. Others depend
on word-of-mouth and prose that stands the test of time….There is
nothing folksy, never mind pastoral or genteel, about Crews. With
caustic and fabulist writing, he exhumed the ghosts of America’s
original sin…..Crews captured the raw essence of humanity in both
fiction and nonfiction. Side by side, these reissues form the
complete picture of an imperfect man who charged hard into extremes
to escape his cultural inheritance.”
—Lauren Leblanc, Los Angeles Times
“Of all of Crews’ magnificent output, it is A Childhood: The
Biography of a Place, first published in 1978 that is the most
memorable and is written in a language that will sear the mind and
memory…. There are startlingly wild scenes written with hair
raising power….This review cannot begin to capture the power of the
writing of Harry Crews nor the essence of this portrait of the life
of a sharecropping family in the Great Depression. All that can be
said is, read it. The power of the written word will never be made
more clear.”
—New York Journal of Books
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