C. D. B. Bryan Explained

C. D. B. Bryan
Birth Name:Courtlandt Dixon Barnes Bryan
Birth Date:22 April 1936
Birth Place:New York City, U.S.
Death Place:Guilford, Connecticut, U.S.
Known For:Friendly Fire (film) (1979)
Friendly Fire (1976)
P. S. Wilkinson (1965)
So Much Unfairness of Things (1965)
Education:Yale University, B.A., 1958
Berkshire School
Employer:Monocle
(Editor-in-Chief, 1961–65)
The New Yorker
Lynn Nesbit at Janklow & Nesbit Literary Agency
Awards:Harper Prize (1965)
Peabody Award (1980)
Parents:Joseph Bryan III
Katharine (Barnes) Bryan
John O'Hara (stepfather)

Courtlandt Dixon Barnes Bryan (April 22, 1936 – December 15, 2009), better known as C. D. B. Bryan, was an American author and journalist.[1] [2]

Biography

He was born on April 22, 1936, in Manhattan, New York City. His parents were Joseph Bryan III and Katharine Barnes Bryan; after they divorced his mother married author John O'Hara.[3]

Bryan attended Berkshire School in the class of 1954 and earned a Bachelor of Arts at Yale University in 1958, where he wrote for campus humor magazine The Yale Record.[4] He was also a member of the fraternity St. Anthony Hall.[5]

He served in the U.S. Army in South Korea (1958–1960), but not happily. He was mobilized again (1961–1962) for the Berlin Crisis of 1961.[2] [6] [7] He was an intelligence officer.

Bryan sold his first short story to The New Yorker in 1961.[8]

He was editor of the satirical Monocle (from 1961 until 1965), Colorado State University writer-in-residence (winter 1967), visiting lecturer University of Iowa writers workshop (1967–1969), special editorial consultant at Yale (1970), visiting professor University of Wyoming (1975), adjunct professor Columbia University (1976), fiction director at the New York City Writers Community from (1977), lecturer in English University of Virginia (spring 1983), and Bard Center fellow Bard College (spring 1984).[2] [9]

His first novel, P. S. Wilkinson, won the Harper Prize in 1965.[6]

Bryan is best known for his non-fiction book Friendly Fire (1976). It began as an idea he sold to William Shawn for an article in The New Yorker, then grew into a series of articles, and then a book. It describes an Iowa farm family, Gene and Peg Mullen, and their reaction and change of heart after their son's accidental death by friendly fire in the Vietnam War.[10] [11] One of the real-life characters featured in the book was future Operation Desert Storm commander H. Norman Schwarzkopf.

It was made into an Emmy-winning 1979 television movie of the same name, for which he shared a Peabody Award. It's also been cited in professional military studies.[12]

Bryan died from cancer on December 15, 2009, at his home in Guilford, Connecticut.[13]

Works

Bryan contributed articles to many periodicals, including The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, The New York Times Book Review, The New Yorker, The New Republic, Esquire, Harper's, Saturday Review, and The Weekly Standard. He additionally author the narration for the 1963 Swedish film The Face of War.

Books (non-fiction)

Adapted by Fay Kanin into the 1979 television movie of the same name. A Book-of-the-Month Club selected alternate.

A Book-of-the-Month Club selected alternate. Second edition included photographs by Jonathan Wallen, 1988.

Books (novels)

"Portions of this novel appeared originally in The New Yorker."

A Literary Guild alternate.

Book contributions

Book reviews

Short stories

A Literary Guild selection.

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Obituary London Independent, March 25, 2010.
  2. [Contemporary Authors Online]
  3. Web site: Tarter . Brent . Joseph Bryan III (1904–1993) . August 5, 2015 . Encyclopedia Virginia.
  4. Bryan, C.D.B. (1958). "Son of a Beach". The Yale Record. New Haven: Yale Record.
  5. https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.stanthonyhall.org/resource/resmgr/reviews/spring_2010.pdf Friendly Fire: The Literary Achievement of Bro. C.D.B. Bryan
  6. A Prize Case of Angst . https://web.archive.org/web/20110203162721/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,839277,00.html . dead . February 3, 2011 . . February 5, 1965 . 1 April 2009 . Novelist Bryan, John O'Hara's stepson, was educated at Yale, served in the Army during the peacetime occupation of Korea, and after his discharge was caught in the call-up of reservists during the 1961 Berlin crisis..
  7. Book: Wade, James . James Wade . One Man's Korea . 1967 . Seoul . 231 . In 1965, as South Korea entered its export-led take-off, C.D.B. Bryan wrote that "this is the foulest, goddamndest country I've ever seen!" The only thing that made Korea bearable, he thought, was "the availability of women". cited inWeb site: Some Thoughts on the Korean-American Relationship . 1 April 2009 . Bruce . Cumings . Bruce Cumings . May 2003 . JPRI Occasional Paper No. 31 . Japan Policy Research Institute at the University of San Francisco Center for the Pacific Rim .
  8. About the author. Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind: A Reporter's Notebook on Alien Abduction, UFOs and the Conference at M.I.T. New York City: Arkana Publishing, 1995. / .
  9. Web site: The Other Monocle, an article by Steven Heller. 31 March 2009. Steven Heller. Steven Heller (graphic design). March 3, 2007. Monocle was started while Navasky was still a student at Yale during the tail end of the McCarthy period. ... Their trenchantly witty writers included some of today's literary and social comedic luminaries, Calvin Trillin, C. D. B. Bryan, Dan Wakefield, Neil Postman, Richard Lingeman, Dan Greenberg, and humorist Marvin Kitman. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090621003624/http://kostasvoyatzis.wordpress.com/2007/03/03/the-other-monocle-an-article-by-steven-heller/. June 21, 2009.
  10. R. Z. . Sheppard . Prairie Protest . https://archive.today/20130204113831/http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,914094,00.html . dead . February 4, 2013 . . April 19, 1976 . 31 March 2009 .
  11. Book: Applegate <!-- Edd Applegate --> , Edd . Literary journalism: a biographical dictionary of writers and editors . registration . 31 March 2009 . illustrated . 1996 . . 978-0-313-29949-0 . 35–36 . C.D.B. Bryan .
  12. Lt Col Charles R. Shrader, U.S. Army . December 1982 . Amicide: The Problem of Friendly Fire in War . Combat Studies Institute
    Research Survey No. 1 . . Fort Leavenworth, Kansas . 31 March 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090330072047/http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/resources/csi/shrader/shrader.asp . March 30, 2009 .
  13. Bruce Weber. "C. Bryan, 73, 'Friendly Fire' Writer, Dies." The New York Times, December 17, 2009, p. A41. Archived from the original.
  14. [Robert Sherrill|Sherrill, Robert.]