Rick Bragg

Dublin Core

Title

Rick Bragg

Subject

Calhoun County, Alabama; Piedmont, Alabama; Rick Bragg; Alabama Authors

Description

Rick Bragg, who was born on July 26, 1959, in Piedmont, Calhoun County to Charles and Margaret Bundrum Bragg, is a noted journalist, teacher, and writer who won the Pulitzer Prize for his work with the New York Times. His most lasting contribution to Alabama letters and Southern literature, is his trilogy of family stories, He believed that they would only be of interest to himself and his family. The books have been bestsellers among people who see themselves and their families in his stories.

Bragg graduated from Jacksonville High School in 1977, went to Jacksonville State University for six months, and was awarded Harvard University's Nieman Fellowship in 1992.

He has worked for the Anniston Star, the Birmingham News, and the New York Times.

The trilogy of books about his family are: All Over But the Shoutin' (1997), Ava's Man (2001), and The Prince of Frogtown (2008). .

He worked with Jessica Lynch (2003) and Jerry Lee Lewis (2014) on their life stories; his journalism was collected into the anthology Somebody Told Me (2000); and his features have been collected into anthology My Southern Journey (2015)..

Rick Bragg teaches courses in literary journalism and feature writing at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.

Creator

Pam Kingsbury, University of North Alabama

Source

Kingsbury, Pam. Inner Voices, Inner Views: Conversations With Southern Writers, The Enolam Group, Norwalk, Connecticut, 2005, p. 1-5.

Publisher

Alabama Cultural Resource Survey

Date

1959 to the present.

Contributor

Pam Kingsbury, University of North Alabama

Rights

Photo courtesy of Rick Bragg.

Type

Still Image and Text