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Mary Ward Brown (1917–2013)

Author of Tongues of Flame

3+ Works 122 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

In addition to publishing two acclaimed collections of short fiction, Mary Ward Brown has received the PEN/Hemingway Award for Fiction, the Hillsdale Prize for Fiction from the Fellowship of Southern Writers, and the Lillian Smith Book Award. She lives in the village of Hamburg, between Marion and show more Marion Junction, Alabama, in the same house in which she was born and raised. show less

Works by Mary Ward Brown

Tongues of Flame (1986) — Author — 73 copies, 4 reviews
Fanning the Spark: A Memoir (2009) 15 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Downhome: An Anthology of Southern Women Writers (1995) — Contributor — 129 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1984 (1984) — Contributor — 111 copies
Flannery O'Connor: In Celebration of Genius (2000) — Contributor — 43 copies, 1 review
New Stories from the South: The Year's Best, 1992 (1992) — Contributor — 24 copies
Stories from the Blue Moon Café III (2004) — Contributor — 20 copies, 1 review
New Stories from the South: The Year's Best, 1989 (1989) — Contributor — 19 copies
The Remembered Gate: Memoirs by Alabama Writers (2002) — Contributor — 16 copies
New Stories from the South: The Year's Best, 1986 (1986) — Contributor — 15 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Brown, Mary Ward
Birthdate
1917-06-18
Date of death
2013-05-14
Gender
female
Education
Judson University (formerly Judson College)
Awards and honors
Hillsdale Award for Fiction (2003)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Hamburg, Alabama, USA
Place of death
Marion, Alabama, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Alabama, USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Mary Ward Brown! Even the name falls trippingly from the tongue, does it not? Only in the last two years has this great woman of letters died. She lived an amazing life. This collection of stories was published when she was no spring chicken (nearly 70 years old).

She published most of the stories individually in literary magazines from the time she graduated college until the time she published the collection. She wrote like Chekhov. One of my favorite lines from the collection comes from show more the titular story where the narrator is discussing her love for a man named Frank. The narrator says, "Spring was Frank in a short-sleeved shirt." Ah, I think I dropped the book on the floor after reading that. The book is filled with these gems, these perfect sentences. (Her method of writing was always to compose in long-hand. She would write her stories on paper and then rewrite them on paper, always removing unnecessary words, which gives her prose the quality of poetry.)

I live in the state where she lived, Alabama. If I were asked to give one book that best portrays Alabama, I would give them this book. And although these stories are set in the South, they contain universal themes- love, loss, class, race, death, aging, and surviving. (I can't remember which one of those literary devils said something along the lines of this: in order to write about universal truths, you must first write from a particular place. Mary Ward Brown wrote from Alabama, but she could have and would have written well from anywhere.)

I cannot recommend these stories enough.
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Well that was different. Not at all what I thought from the cover I had: https://pictures.abebooks.com/isbn/9780671641573-us.jpg (but that's not quite right, as there's no purple or anything weird).

Very short stories, mostly taking place in a small town outside of Montgomery in the 1980s. Issues of tradition and of race are very complicated, and Brown's treatment is clarifying, though she does almost oversimplify. There's clearly a bit of academic *L*iterary fussiness of metaphor and show more allusion, but the vignettes are engaging and readable straight, too.

3.5 stars rounded up because I've never read anything like it before, and I do recommend it to interested readers. There is no ya-ya sisterhood here, no debutante, little humor, not a whole lot of alcohol, some church business, no Colonel, few pearl necklaces. There is dialect, there are both compassion and cruelty, both love and anger.

And it's by a woman, mostly about women of all ages and both races. Even though the women tend to work harder, be more responsible, and serve more obediently than their men, this book would definitely pass the Bechdel test.
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Mary Ward Brown will be coming to read in Jackson next month. I can not wait to meet her. This is a must read for anyone struggling to find time and justification to write while also struggling with being a mother and wife and making ends meet. She never complains in her memoir, but delivers hope to all of us who do. I borrowed this from a library, but after reading it, I know I'll have to buy it and hopefully have it signed. This book is a good companion to Tillie Olsen's book, Silences.
Very good. The stories are calm and quiet, but poignant. Recommended.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
3
Also by
10
Members
122
Popularity
#163,288
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
10

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