David Bradley (novelist)

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David Bradley
Bradley D.jpg
BornDavid Henry Bradley, Jr.
1950
Bedford, Pennsylvania, USA
Occupation novelist, essayist, academic
Genre African American literature
Notable works The Chaneysville Incident
Notable awards PEN/Faulkner Award
1982

Academy Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters
1982

Contents

O. Henry Award
2014

David Henry Bradley, Jr. (born 1950, in Bedford, Pennsylvania) [1] is the author of South Street and The Chaneysville Incident , which won the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1982. Both novels have been recently released in electronic editions by Open Road Media. The Chaneysville Incident, inspired in part by the real-life discovery of the graves of a group of runaway slaves on a farm near Chaneysville in Bedford County, PA, where Bradley was born, also earned Bradley a 1982 Academy Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. His short story "You Remember the Pinmill" (winner of a 2014 O. Henry Award) was published in 2013 in Narrative Magazine .

Since 1985, Bradley has worked primarily in creative nonfiction, with pieces in Esquire, Redbook, The New York Times, Philadelphia Magazine, The Pennsylvania Gazette, The Nation and Dissent. His work has also appeared online in Obit, Narrative, and Brevity. Bradley holds a BA in Creative Writing from the University of Pennsylvania and an MA in United States Studies from the University of London, and was a faculty member in the Creative Writing Program at the University of Oregon. [2] He appeared on the June 12, 2011 episode of 60 Minutes in a segment regarding the censored version of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn . [3]

Selected works

Fiction
Essays and creative non-fiction

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References

  1. Button, Marilyn D. (1999). "David Henry Bradley, Jr. (1950-)". In Emmanuel S., Nelson (ed.). Contemporary African American Novelists: A Bio-Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 42–3. ISBN   0-313-30501-3.
  2. "Creative Writing Program Faculty". University of Oregon. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  3. "'Huckleberry Finn' and the N-word debate". CBS News.