Richard Ford

Last updated
Richard Ford
Richard Ford at Goteborg Book Fair 2013 02.jpg
Ford in 2013
Born (1944-02-16) February 16, 1944 (age 80)
Jackson, Mississippi, U.S.
Occupation Novelist, short story writer
NationalityAmerican
Education Michigan State University (BA)
University of California, Irvine (MFA)
Period1976–present
Genre Literary fiction
Literary movement Minimalism
Dirty realism

Richard Ford (born February 16, 1944) is an American novelist and short story author, and writer of a series of novels featuring the character Frank Bascombe. [1]

Contents

Ford's first collection of short stories, Rock Springs , was published in 1987. [2] [3]

In the United States, Ford received the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for his novel Independence Day . In Spain, he won the Princess of Asturias Award for 2016. In 2018, Ford received the Park Kyong-ni Prize, an international literary award from South Korea.

His novel Wildlife was adapted into a 2018 film of the same name, and in 2023 Ford published Be Mine , his fifth work of fiction chronicling the life of Frank Bascombe.

Early life

Ford was born in Jackson, Mississippi, the only son of Parker Carrol and Edna Ford. Parker was a traveling salesman for Faultless Starch, a Kansas City company. Of his mother, Ford said, "Her ambition was to be, first, in love with my father and, second, to be a full-time mother." When Ford was eight years old, his father had a severe heart failure, and thereafter Ford spent as much time with his grandfather, a former prizefighter and hotel owner in Little Rock, Arkansas, as he did with his parents in Mississippi. [4] Ford's father died of a second heart attack in 1960. In Jackson, Ford lived across the street from the home of author Eudora Welty. [5]

Ford's grandfather had worked for a railroad. At the age of 19, before deciding to attend college, Ford began work on the Missouri Pacific train line as a locomotive engineer's assistant, learning the work while doing the job. [6]

Ford received a B.A. degree from Michigan State University. Having enrolled to study hotel management, he switched to English. After graduating, he taught junior high school in Flint, Michigan, and enlisted in the United States Marine Corps but was discharged after contracting hepatitis. At university he met Kristina Hensley, his future wife and they married in 1968. [4]

Despite mild dyslexia, Ford developed a serious interest in literature. He has stated in interviews that his dyslexia may have helped him as a reader since it forced him to read books slowly and thoughtfully. [7]

Ford briefly attended law school but quit and participated with the creative writing program at the University of California, Irvine, to pursue a Master of Fine Arts degree, which he received in 1970. Ford chose this course simply because "they admitted me. I remember getting the application for Iowa and thinking they'd never have let me in. I'm sure I was right about that too. But typical of me, I didn't know who was teaching at Irvine. I didn't know it was important to know such things. I wasn't the most curious of young men, even though I give myself credit for not letting that deter me." Actually, Oakley Hall and E. L. Doctorow were teaching there and Ford has acknowledged they influenced him. [8] In 1971, he was selected for a three-year appointment in the University of Michigan Society of Fellows. [9]

Early career

Ford published his first novel, A Piece of My Heart, [10] the story of two unlikely drifters whose paths cross on an island in the Mississippi River, during 1976, and followed it with The Ultimate Good Luck during 1981. During the interim he briefly taught at Williams College and Princeton University. [4] Despite good notices, the books sold little, and Ford retired from fiction writing to become a writer for the New York magazine Inside Sports. "I realized," Ford said, "there was probably a wide gulf between what I could do and what would succeed with readers. I felt that I'd had a chance to write two novels, and neither of them had really created much stir, so maybe I should find real employment, and earn my keep." [8]

During 1982, the magazine was terminated, and when Sports Illustrated did not hire Ford, he resumed writing fiction, composing The Sportswriter, [11] about a failed novelist turned sportswriter who undergoes an emotional crisis after the death of his son. It was named one of Time magazine's five best books of 1986 and was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. [8] Ford followed up that success with Rock Springs (1987), [12] a story collection —set mostly in Montana —that includes what remain some of his most anthologized short stories. [13]

Mid-career and acclaim

Ford's 1990 novel Wildlife , a story of a Montana golf professional turned firefighter, met with mixed reviews and middling sales, but by the end of the 1990s Ford was increasingly sought after as an editor and contributor to various projects. Ford edited the 1990 The Best American Short Stories , the 1992 Granta Book of the American Short Story, the Fall 1996 "fiction issue" of Ploughshares , [14] and the 1998 Granta Book of the American Long Story. In the latter volume's "Introduction," Ford stipulated that he preferred the designation "long story" instead of the term "novella." For the publishing project Library of America, Ford edited a two-volume edition of the selected works of the Mississippi writer Eudora Welty, which was published during 1998.

During 1995, Ford published the novel Independence Day , a sequel to The Sportswriter, featuring the continued story of its protagonist, Frank Bascombe. Reviews were positive, and the novel became the first to win both the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction [15] and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. [16] During the same year, Ford was chosen as winner of the Rea Award for the Short Story, for outstanding achievement for that genre. [17] He ended the 1990s with a well-received collection of short stories, Women With Men, published during 1997. The Paris Review termed him a "master" of the short story genre. [2]

Later life and writings

Richard Ford photographed by Oliver Mark, Berlin 2002 Oliver Mark - Richard Ford, Berlin 2002.jpg
Richard Ford photographed by Oliver Mark, Berlin 2002

Ford lived for many years in New Orleans in the French Quarter, on lower Bourbon Street then in the Garden District of the same city, where his wife, Kristina, was the executive director of the city planning commission. For a while Ford and his wife resided in East Boothbay, Maine. [18] As of 2023, Ford lives in Billings, Montana where he bought a house. [19] During the intervening years, Ford lived in other locations, usually in the United States, as he pursued a peripatetic teaching career.

He obtained a teaching appointment at Bowdoin College during 2005 but kept the job for only one semester. [20] During 2008 Ford was an adjunct professor of the Oscar Wilde Centre with the School of English at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, teaching in the Masters programme in creative writing. [21] Starting December 29, 2010, Ford assumed the job of senior fiction professor at the University of Mississippi during the autumn of 2011, replacing Barry Hannah, who died during March 2010. During the autumn of 2012, he became the Emmanuel Roman and Barrie Sardoff Roman Professor of the Humanities and Professor of Writing at the Columbia University School of the Arts. [22]

As the new century commenced, he published another story collection, A Multitude of Sins (2002), followed by the novels The Lay Of The Land, —the third in his Bascombe series— in 2006 and Canada , published during May 2012. [23] According to Ford, The Lay Of The Land completed his series of Bascombe novels but Canada was a stand-alone novel.

In April 2013, Ford read from a new Frank Bascombe story without revealing to the audience whether it was part of a longer work. [24] By 2014, it was confirmed that the story was to appear in the book Let Me Be Frank With You, published during November of that year. [25] The latter work consists of four interconnected novellas (or "long stories"), all narrated by Frank Bascombe. [26] [27] Let Me Be Frank With You was a finalist for the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction. It did not win the prize but the selection committee praised the book for its "unflinching series of narratives, set in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, insightfully portraying a society in decline." [28]

As in the preceding decade, Ford continued to assist with various editing projects. During 2007, he edited the New Granta Book of the American Short Story and in 2011 he edited Blue Collar, White Collar, No Collar: Stories of Work. During May 2017, Ford published a memoir, Between Them: Remembering My Parents. [29]

In 2018, Wildlife was adapted into a film of the same name by director Paul Dano and screenwriter Zoe Kazan. It was released to widespread critical acclaim.[ citation needed ]

In 2020, Ford's short story collection, Sorry For Your Trouble, was published. His novel, Be Mine, was published in June 2023 and is the fifth —and presumably final— book in Ford's so-called "Bascombe series." [30]

Reception

Ford began publishing his short stories in the 1980s, which corresponded with an American renaissance in the short story that centered around Raymond Carver (1938–1988). [31] So there was a tendency early on to associate Ford's stories in Rock Springs with minimalism and its offshoot, an aesthetic style known as Dirty realism that referred to Carver's lower-middle-class subjects or the protagonists Ford portrays in Rock Springs. "Dirty realism" and "minimalism" came to be associated with a long list of writers during the 1970s and 1980s, including Tobias Wolff, Ann Beattie, Frederick Barthelme, Larry Brown, Jayne Anne Phillips, and Gordon Lish. [31]

However, many of the characters in the novels about Frank Bascombe (The Sportswriter, Independence Day, The Lay of the Land, Let Me Be Frank With You, Be Mine), including the protagonist, enjoy degrees of material affluence and cultural capital not normally associated with dirty realism.

Ford's writing demonstrates "a meticulous concern for the nuances of language ... [and] the rhythms of phrases and sentences". He has described his sense of language as "a source of pleasure in itself—- all of its corporeal qualities, its syncopations, moods, sounds, the way things look on the page". Besides this "devotion to language" is what he terms "the fabric of affection that holds people close enough together to survive". [32]

Comparisons have been drawn between Ford's work and the writings of John Updike, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway and Walker Percy. Ford resists such comparisons, commenting, "You can't write ... on the strength of influence. You can only write a good story or a good novel by yourself." [33]

Ford's works of fiction "dramatize the breakdown of such cultural institutions as marriage, family, and community," and his "marginalized protagonists often typify the rootlessness and nameless longing ... pervasive in a highly mobile, present-oriented society in which individuals, having lost a sense of the past, relentlessly pursue their own elusive identities in the here and now." [34] Ford "looks to art, rather than religion, to provide consolation and redemption in a chaotic time." [35]

Controversies

Ford once sent Alice Hoffman a copy of one of her books with bullet holes in it after she angered him by unfavorably reviewing The Sportswriter. [36]

In 2004, Ford spat on Colson Whitehead when encountering him at a party two years after Whitehead published a negative review of A Multitude of Sins in The New York Times. [37] Thirteen years later, Ford remained unrepentant. Writing in Esquire in 2017, Ford declared that "as of today, I don't feel any different about Mr. Whitehead, or his review, or my response." [38]

Awards and honors

Selected works

Novels

Story collections

Memoir

Screenplays

As contributor or editor

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Alan McPherson</span> American essayist and short-story writer

James Alan McPherson was an American essayist and short-story writer. He was the first African-American writer to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and was included among the first group of artists who received a MacArthur Fellowship. At the time of his death, McPherson was a professor emeritus of fiction at the Iowa Writers' Workshop.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eudora Welty</span> American short story writer, novelist and photographer (1909–2001)

Eudora Alice Welty was an American short story writer, novelist and photographer who wrote about the American South. Her novel The Optimist's Daughter won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973. Welty received numerous awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Order of the South. She was the first living author to have her works published by the Library of America. Her house in Jackson, Mississippi has been designated as a National Historic Landmark and is open to the public as a house museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Andre Dubus</span> American writer

Andre Jules Dubus II was an American writer of short stories, novels, and essays.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Gates (author)</span> American novelist

David Gates is an American journalist and novelist. His works have been shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize.

<i>Independence Day</i> (Ford novel) 1995 novel by Richard Ford

Independence Day is a 1995 novel by Richard Ford and the sequel to Ford's 1986 novel The Sportswriter. This novel is the second in what is now a five-part series, the first being The Sportswriter. It was followed by The Lay of the Land (2006), Let Me Be Frank With You (2014) and Be Mine (2023). Independence Day won the Pulitzer Prize and PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction in 1996, becoming the first novel ever to win both awards in a single year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Denis Johnson</span> American novelist and poet (1949–2017)

Denis Hale Johnson was an American novelist, short-story writer, and poet. He is perhaps best known for his debut short story collection, Jesus' Son (1992). His most successful novel, Tree of Smoke (2007), won the National Book Award for Fiction. Johnson was twice shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Altogether, Johnson was the author of nine novels, one novella, two books of short stories, three collections of poetry, two collections of plays, and one book of reportage. His final work, a book of short stories titled The Largesse of the Sea Maiden, was published posthumously in 2018.

Chris Adrian is an American author. Adrian's writing styles in short stories vary greatly; from modernist realism to pronounced lyrical allegory. His novels both tend toward surrealism, having mostly realistic characters experience fantastic circumstances. He has written four novels: Gob's Grief, The Children's Hospital, The Great Night, and The New World. In 2008, he published A Better Angel, a collection of short stories. His short fiction has also appeared in The Paris Review, Zoetrope, Ploughshares, McSweeney's, The New Yorker, The Best American Short Stories, and Story. He was one of 11 fiction writers to receive a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2009. He lives in San Francisco.

<i>Ploughshares</i> American literary journal

Ploughshares is an American literary journal established in 1971 by DeWitt Henry and Peter O'Malley in The Plough and Stars, an Irish pub in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Since 1989, Ploughshares has been based at Emerson College in Boston. Ploughshares publishes issues four times a year, two of which are guest-edited by a prominent writer who explores personal visions, aesthetics, and literary circles. Guest editors have been the recipients of Nobel and Pulitzer prizes, National Book Awards, MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships, and numerous other honors. Ploughshares also publishes longform stories and essays, known as Ploughshares Solos, all of which are edited by the editor-in-chief, Ladette Randolph, and a literary blog, launched in 2009, which publishes critical and personal essays, interviews, and book reviews.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jess Row</span> American short story writer, novelist, and professor

Jess Row is an American short story writer, novelist, and professor.

<i>The Sportswriter</i> 1986 novel by Richard Ford

The Sportswriter is a 1986 novel by Richard Ford, and the first of five books of fiction to feature the protagonist Frank Bascombe. In The Sportswriter, Bascombe is portrayed as a failed novelist turned sportswriter who undergoes an existential crisis following the death of his son. The sequel to The Sportswriter is the Pulitzer Prize-winning Independence Day, published in 1995. After the third installment in the series, titled The Lay of the Land, was published in 2006, the three books together are sometimes identified as "The Bascombe Trilogy." Ford called them "The Bascombe Novels." In 2014, a fourth book in the series, titled Let Me Be Frank With You, was published. The latest book in the Bascombe series, titled Be Mine, was published in 2023.

Julie Orringer is an American novelist, short story writer, and professor. She attended Cornell University and the Iowa Writer's Workshop, and was a Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. She was born in Miami, Florida and now lives in Brooklyn with her husband, fellow writer Ryan Harty. She is the author of The Invisible Bridge, a New York Times bestseller, and How to Breathe Underwater, a collection of stories; her novel, The Flight Portfolio, tells the story of Varian Fry, the New York journalist who went to Marseille in 1940 to save writers and artists blacklisted by the Gestapo. The novel inspired the Netflix series Transatlantic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jennifer Egan</span> Novelist, short story writer

Jennifer Egan is an American novelist and short-story writer. Her novel, A Visit from the Goon Squad, won the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction. From 2018 to 2020, she served as the president of PEN America.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ZZ Packer</span> American writer

Zuwena "ZZ" Packer is an American writer, primarily of works of short fiction.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adam Johnson (writer)</span> American novelist and short story writer (born 1967)

Adam Johnson is an American novelist and short story writer. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his 2012 novel, The Orphan Master's Son, and the National Book Award for his 2015 story collection Fortune Smiles. He is also a professor of English at Stanford University with a focus on creative writing.

Karen E. Bender is an American novelist and short story writer.

Sharona Muir is an American writer and academic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Leni Zumas</span> American novelist

Leni Zumas is an American writer from Washington, D.C., who lives in Oregon. She is the author of Red Clocks,The Listeners, and the story collection Farewell Navigator. Her short fiction, essays, and interviews have appeared in BOMB, The Cut, Granta, Guernica, Portland Monthly, The Times Literary Supplement, The Sunday Times Style (UK), Tin House, and elsewhere. She teaches creative writing at Portland State University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Feroz Rather</span>

Feroz Rather is a novelist and academic who was born in Bumthan, South Kashmir but now lives in Boston.

John Domini is an Italian-American author, translator and critic who has been widely published in literary and news magazines, including The Paris Review, The New York Times, Ploughshares, The Washington Post, and Literary Hub. He is the author of three short story collections, four novels, and a 2021 memoir. Domini has also published one book of criticism, one book of poetry, and a memoir translated from Italian. He is a member of the National Book Critics Circle. Domini lives in Des Moines with his wife, the science fiction writer Lettie Prell.

<i>Let Me Be Frank With You</i> 2014 novel by Richard Ford

Let Me Be Frank With You (2014) by Richard Ford, is the sequel to The Lay of the Land (2006) and the fourth in a series of five books of fiction that features protagonist and narrator Frank Bascombe.

References

  1. Sansom, Ian (June 15, 2023). "The heroic last stand of an all-American everyman". The Telegraph via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  2. 1 2 Lyons, Bonnie (1996-01-01). "Richard Ford, The Art of Fiction No. 147". Paris Review. No. 140. ISSN   0031-2037 . Retrieved 2016-01-10.
  3. "Love and Truth: Use With Caution". archive.nytimes.com.New York Times (September 20, 1987), Sunday, Late City Final Edition; Section 7; Page 1, Column 3; Book Review Desk
  4. 1 2 3 Guagliardo 2001, p.xiii.
  5. Barton, Laura (2003-02-08). "Guardian profile". Guardian. London. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  6. Ford, Richard (2013-10-19). "A Boy Who Played with Trains". New York Times. New York. Retrieved 2013-10-20.
  7. "Ford on His Dyslexia, in Conversation with the Washington Post;". Washingtonpost.com. 2006-12-14. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  8. 1 2 3 This citation is now only available in its "Profile in the journal Ploughshares". Pshares.org. 2010-07-08. Archived from the original on 2009-10-22. Retrieved 2011-08-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) via the Web Archive. It was originally cited here: "Profile in the journal Ploughshares". Pshares.org. 2010-07-08. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  9. "Alumni Fellows | Society of Fellows". Societyoffellows.umich.edu. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  10. Ford, Richard (1985-01-01). A Piece of My Heart. Vintage. ISBN   9780394729145. OCLC   924573478.
  11. Ford, Richard (1996-01-01). The Sportswriter. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN   9780679454519. OCLC   35049877.
  12. Ford, Richard (1987). Rock Springs : Stories . Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN   9780871131591. OCLC   829387991.
  13. Moore, Lorrie (October 16, 2014). "Canada Dry – The New Yorker". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 2014-10-16.
  14. "Fall 1996 – Ploughshares". www.pshares.org.
  15. 1 2 "PEN/Faulkner Foundation list of winners". Penfaulkner.org. Archived from the original on 2008-04-21. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  16. 1 2 "Pulitzer Prize citation". Pulitzer.org. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  17. 1 2 "Rea Award citation". Reaaward.org. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  18. Mehegan, David (2006-12-04). "Boston Globe profile". Boston.com. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  19. "Richard Ford on 'The natural attrition of getting old'". December 2022.
  20. "News of Bowdoin College appointment". Bowdoin.edu. 2004-10-13. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  21. "Oscar Wilde Centre: Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin, Ireland". Tcd.ie. 2010-12-22. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
  22. "Richard Ford, Pulitzer Prize Winner, Joins Columbia Faculty | Columbia University School of the Arts". Arts.columbia.edu. Archived from the original on 2013-12-12. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  23. "Canada (novel)". www.harpercollins.com.
  24. Liu, Lowen (2013-04-30). "Richard Ford's New Frank Bascombe Story Shows the Damage Done by Hurricane Sandy". Slate.com. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  25. "Frank and me: Richard Ford on his Bascombe novels" . Financial Times. 24 October 2014. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  26. Richard Ford Archived 2015-12-20 at the Wayback Machine , Lyceum Agency, 2014
  27. Treisman, Deborah (November 5, 2014). "Living with Frank Bascombe: An Interview with Richard Ford". The New Yorker via www.newyorker.com.
  28. 1 2 "The 2015 Pulitzer Prize Finalist in Fiction", The Pulitzer Prizes.
  29. "For Richard Ford, Memoir Is A Chance To 'Tell The Unthinkable'". NPR.org.
  30. 1 2 3 "Richard Ford Returns With a New Collection of Stories". Columbia News. 26 July 2023.
  31. 1 2 "Granta interview with Tim Adams". Granta.com. 25 October 2007.
  32. Guagliardo 2001, p.vii.
  33. Guagliardo 2001, p. xi.
  34. Guagliardo 2000, p. xiv.
  35. Guagliardo 2000, p. xvi.
  36. "Richard Ford and Alice Hoffman 30 years later". Entertainment Weekly. March 23, 2016. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  37. Whitehead, Colson (March 3, 2002). "The End of the Affair (Published 2002)". The New York Times.
  38. Ford, Richard (1 June 2017). "Perilous Business: A novelist takes on his critics". Esquire. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  39. "MIAL Winners". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  40. "Richard Ford | Ploughshares". www.pshares.org.
  41. "Saint Louis Literary Award – Saint Louis University". www.slu.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-08-23. Retrieved 2016-07-25.
  42. Saint Louis University Library Associates. "Richard Ford to Receive 2005 Saint Louis Literary Award" . Retrieved July 25, 2016.
  43. "Kenyon Review for Literary Achievement". KenyonReview.org.
  44. Italie, Hillel (June 30, 2013). "Ford, Egan Win Literary Medals". San Jose Mercury News . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved May 28, 2019.
  45. "Richard Ford wins Princess of Asturias Award for Literature". euronews. 15 June 2016.
  46. "Siegfried-Lenz-Preis an US-Schriftsteller Richard Ford". Der Standard (in German). 12 June 2000. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
  47. Routhier, Ray (May 16, 2019). "Maine author Richard Ford wins lifetime achievement award from Library of Congress". Portland Press Herald . Retrieved May 28, 2019.
  48. Michael Schaub. "Frankly, Bascombe's Return Has Some Problems", 2014-11-06. Retrieved 2015-01-06.
  49. Routhier, Ray (May 16, 2019). "Maine author Richard Ford wins lifetime achievement award from Library of Congress" . Retrieved Sep 26, 2019.

Works cited

Further reading

Work

Profiles

Interviews

Archival collections