Hob Broun Explained

Hob Broun
Birth Name:Heywood Orren Broun
Occupation:Author
Nationality:American
Alma Mater:Reed College
Genre:Short Story, Novel
Notableworks:Inner Tube

Hob Broun (born Heywood Orren Broun; 1950 – December 16, 1987) was an American author who lived in Portland, Oregon. Following the publication of his first novel, Odditorium, Broun required spinal surgery to remove a tumor. The surgery saved his life but he became paralyzed. Subsequently, he wrote two books by blowing air through a tube that activated the specially outfitted keyboard of a computer. Using this technology, he completed a second novel, Inner Tube, and wrote the short stories contained in a posthumously published collection entitled Cardinal Numbers which won an Oregon Book Award in 1989.[1] He was working on a third novel when he died of asphyxiation after his respirator broke down in his home in Portland, Oregon. He was thirty-seven years old.[2] [3]

Broun was born in Manhattan and graduated from the Dalton School. He attended Reed College in Portland. He was the son of Heywood Hale Broun, the writer and broadcaster, and the grandson of Ruth Hale, a freelance writer and founder of the Lucy Stone League, and Heywood Broun, the newspaper columnist.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fiction. Literary Arts. en-US. 2019-07-10.
  2. Web site: hob broun reissued at last!. 17 January 2014. 2013-10-29.
  3. Web site: Writers No One Reads. 17 January 2014.
  4. News: Hob Broun, a Novelist, Dies as Respirator Fails. 17 January 2014. The New York Times. 1987-12-24.