Pat Conroy

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Pat Conroy
Born Donald Patrick Conroy
(1945-10-26) October 26, 1945 (age 78)
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Period 1970-present
Genre Literary fiction
nonfiction
Notable works The Water Is Wide
The Great Santini
The Lords of Discipline
The Prince of Tides
Website
www.patconroy.com

Pat Conroy (born October 26, 1945) is a New York Times bestselling author who has written several acclaimed novels and memoirs. Two of his novels, The Prince of Tides and The Great Santini, were made into Oscar-nominated films. He is recognized as a leading figure of late-20th century Southern literature.[1]

Early life

Born Donald Patrick Conroy in Atlanta, Georgia USA, he was the eldest of seven children (five boys and two girls) born to Marine Colonel Donald Conroy, of Chicago, and the former Frances "Peggy" Peek of Alabama. Conroy grew up in a military family, moving many times during his childhood and adolescence and never having a hometown, as his family followed his father, a fighter pilot, who was transferred from military base to military base. Conroy moved 23 times before he was 18 years old.[citation needed]

Conroy has shared that his stories have been heavily influenced by his military brat upbringing, and in particular, difficulties experienced with his own father, a US Marine Corps pilot, who was physically and emotionally abusive toward his children, and the pain of a youth growing up in such a harsh environment is evident in Conroy's novels, particularly The Great Santini. While he was living in Orlando, Florida, Conroy's 5th grade basketball team defeated a team of 6th graders, making the sport his prime outlet for bottled-up emotions for more than a dozen years. Conroy also cites his family's constant military-related moves and growing up immersed in military culture as significant influences in his life (in both positive and negative ways).

Writing career

Conroy is a graduate of The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina and his experiences there provided the basis for two of his best-known works, the novel The Lords of Discipline and the memoir My Losing Season. The latter details his senior year on the school's underdog basketball team, which won the longest game in the history of Southern Conference basketball against rival Virginia Military Institute in quadruple overtime in 1967.

His first book, The Boo, is a collection of anecdotes about cadet life centering on Lt. Colonel Thomas N. Courvoisie, who had served as Assistant Commandant of Cadets at The Citadel from 1961 to 1968[2] (Courvoisie appears as the fictional character Colonel Thomas Berrineau, a.k.a. "The Bear," in The Lords Of Discipline). After completing The Boo, Conroy couldn't find a publisher for the book, so he self-published it.

After graduating from The Citadel, Conroy taught English in Beaufort, South Carolina. While there he met and married Barbara Jones, a young widow of the Vietnam War who had two children (whom he adopted).[3] He then accepted a job teaching children in a one-room schoolhouse on remote Daufuskie Island, South Carolina.

Conroy was fired at the conclusion of his first year on the island for his unconventional teaching practices, including his refusal to use corporal punishment on students, and for his lack of respect for the school's administration. Conroy wrote his book The Water Is Wide based on his experiences as a teacher. The book won Conroy a humanitarian award from the National Education Association and was made into a feature film, Conrack, starring Jon Voight in 1974. Hallmark produced a television version of the book in 2006.

In 1976, Conroy published his first novel, The Great Santini. The main character of the novel is Marine fighter pilot Colonel "Bull" Meecham, who dominates and terrorizes his family. Bull Meecham also psychologically abuses his teenage son Ben. The character is based on Conroy's father Donald. (According to My Losing Season, Donald Conroy was even worse than the character depicted in Santini.[4][5])

The Great Santini caused friction within the Conroy family, who felt that he had betrayed family secrets by writing about his father. Members of his mother's family would picket Conroy's book signings, passing out pamphlets asking people not to buy the novel. The friction contributed to the failure of his first marriage.[6] However, the book also eventually helped repair Conroy's relationship with his father, and they became very close. His father, looking to prove that he was not like the character in the book, changed his manners drastically.[7] According to Conroy, his father would often sign copies of his son's novels, "I hope you enjoy my son’s latest work of fiction." He would underline the word “fiction” five or six times. "That boy of mine sure has a vivid imagination. Ol’ lovable, likable Col. Don Conroy, USMC (Ret.), the Great Santini."[8] The novel was made into a film of the same name in 1979, starring Robert Duvall.

Publication of The Lords of Discipline in 1980 upset many of his fellow graduates of The Citadel, who felt that his portrayal of campus life was highly unflattering. The rift was not healed until 2000, when Conroy was awarded an honorary degree and asked to deliver the commencement address the following year. As Pat Conroy says in the novel, "I wear the ring", meaning that as a graduate of The Citadel, he has a right to comment on it.

In 1986, Conroy published what is arguably his most acclaimed and well-known novel, The Prince of Tides. The book tells the story of Tom Wingo, an unemployed South Carolina teacher who goes to New York City to help his sister, Savannah, a poet who has attempted suicide, to come to terms with their past. Again, the novel was made into a film of the same name in 1991, starring Nick Nolte and Barbra Streisand.

In 1995, Conroy published Beach Music, a novel about an American ex-patriate living in Rome who returns to South Carolina upon news of his mother's terminal illness. The story reveals his attempt to confront personal demons, including the suicide of his wife, the subsequent custody battle with his in-laws over their daughter, and the attempt by a film-making friend to rekindle old friendships which were compromised during the days of the Vietnam War.

The Pat Conroy Cookbook, published in 1999, is a collection of favorite recipes accompanied by stories about his life, including many stories of growing up in South Carolina.

In 2009, Conroy published South of Broad, which again uses the familiar backdrop of Charleston following the suicide of newspaperman Leo King's brother, and alternates narratives of a diverse group of friends between 1969 and 1989.

In May 2013, Conroy was named editor-at-large of Story River Books, a newly created fiction division of the University of South Carolina Press.[9] In October 2013, four years after being first publicized,[10] Conroy published a memoir called The Death of Santini, which recounts the volatile relationship he shared with his father up until his father's death in 1998.[11]

Conroy was inducted into the South Carolina Hall of Fame on 18 March 2009.[12]

Military brat cultural identity and awareness movement

Conroy was a major supporter of the research and writing efforts of Journalist Mary Edwards Wertsch in her identification of the hidden subculture of American Military Brats, the children of career military families, who grow up moving constantly, deeply immersed in the military, and often personally affected by war (a subculture in which Conroy himself grew up).[13]

Conroy's essay on military childhood

In 1991, Wertsch "launched the movement for military brat cultural identity" with her book Military Brats: Legacies of Childhood inside the Fortress. In researching her book, Wertsch identified common themes from interviews of over 80 offspring of military households, including the special challenges, strengths and also the unique subculture experienced by American "military brats". While this book does not purport to be a scientific study, subsequent research has validated many of her findings.[13]

Conroy contributed a now widely circulated ten-page essay on American military childhood, including his own childhood, to Wertsch's book, which was used as the introduction. It included the following:

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Her book speaks in a language that is clear and stinging and instantly recognizable to me [as a brat], yet it's a language I was not even aware I spoke. She isolates the military brats of America as a new indigenous subculture with our own customs, rites of passage, forms of communication, and folkways .... With this book, Mary [Wertsch] astonished me and introduced me to a secret family I did not know I had.[14]

Conroy's writings and comments in documentary on the lives of military brats

Conroy also authorized the use of his work in the award-winning documentary Brats: Our Journey Home directed by Donna Musil, that endeavors to bring the hidden subculture of military brats into greater public awareness, as well as aiding military brat self-awareness and support.[15]

The documentary ends with a quote of Conroy about the invisibility of the military brat subculture to the wider American society.[15]

Conroy wrote, "We spent our entire childhoods in the service of our country, and no one even knew we were there."[15]

Personal life

Conroy has been married three times.

His first marriage was to Barbara (née Bolling) Jones on 10 October 1969, while he was teaching on Daufuskie Island.[16] Jones, who had been Conroy's next door neighbor in Beaufort, South Carolina, had been widowed when her first husband, Joseph Wester Jones III, a fighter pilot stationed in Vietnam, had been shot down and killed. Jones already had one daughter, Jessica, and was pregnant at the time of her husband's death with their second child, Melissa. Conroy adopted both girls after he married their mother, and then they had a daughter of their own, Megan. They divorced in 1977.[17]

Conroy then married Lenore (née Gurewitz) Fleischer in 1981.[17] He became the stepfather to her two children, Gregory and Emily, and the couple also had one daughter,[18] to whom he dedicated his 2010 book My Reading Life, "This book is dedicated to my lost daughter, Susannah Ansley Conroy. Know this: I love you with my heart and always will. Your return to my life would be one of the happiest moments I could imagine." Conroy and Fleischer divorced on 26 October 1995, Conroy's 50th birthday.[19]

Conroy married his third wife in May 1998, writer Cassandra King, who is the author of four popular novels.[18]

He currently lives in Beaufort, with wife Cassandra. Conroy has commented that his wife is a much happier writer than he is. In an interview with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, he commented: "I'll hear her cackle with laughter at some funny line she's written. I've never cackled with laughter at a single line I've ever written. None of it has given me pleasure. She writes with pleasure and joy, and I sit there in gloom and darkness."[20]

Conroy's friend, political cartoonist Doug Marlette, died in a car accident in July 2007. Conroy and Joe Klein eulogized Marlette at the funeral.[21] There were 10 eulogists in all, and Conroy called Marlette his best friend,[22] and said: "The first person to cry, when he heard about Doug's death, was God."[23]

Works

See also

References

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  3. Barnes and Noble
  4. Newsom, Jim. - "Winter Reading". - Port Folio Weekly. - 17 December 2002.
  5. O'Neill, Molly. - FILM: "Pat Conroy's Tale: Of Time and 'Tides'". - The New York Times. - 22 December 1991.
  6. http://www.barnesandnoble.com/writers/writerdetails.asp?cid=586909 Barnes and Noble author biography page, accessed 22 October 2009
  7. Pat Conroy interview
  8. Conroy, Pat (2010). - My Reading Life. - Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. - chapter 6 - ISBN 9780385533843.
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  13. 13.0 13.1 Podcast interview with Rudy Maxa. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  14. From the introduction to the book, but quoted from TCK World's Suggested Reading at the Wayback Machine (archived December 30, 2006).
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 Musil, Donna, Producer and Director, "Brats: Our Journey Home" Documentary about Military Brats, Brats Without Borders Inc., Atlanta Georgia, 2005.
  16. Conroy, Pat (1987). - The Water is Wide. - New York, New York: Random House. - p.103 - ISBN 978-0-553-26893-5.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Knadle, Charlene Babb (2006). - "Pat Conroy". - Popular Contemporary Writers. - New York: Marshall Cavendish. - p.470. - ISBN 978-0-7614-7601-6.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Knadle, p.471.
  19. Conroy, Pat (2002). - My Losing Season. - New York: Nan A. Talese. - p.10. - ISBN 978-0-385-48912-6.
  20. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0175852/bio Internet Movie Database, Pat Conroy entry, accessed 22 October 2009
  21. Independent Weekly, "Goodbye, Doug Marlette" 18 July 2007
  22. WRAL, "Friends Remember Doug Marlette As Staunch Defender of Free Speech" 14 July 2007
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links