Monday, January 13, 2014

I'm Spending this Winter with Pat Conroy

January is my month for reading.  This doesn't mean that I don't read in February.  It has to do with the busyness of the holidays and
my longing for more time to do what I want to do.

Pat Conroy is my all-time favorite author.  This January, I am starting to re-read, and a few for the first time, everything he has written.  When I discovered him in the late 1990's,  I read every book and waited for the next one to come out.  In 1997, while flying to Italy, Beach Music was the perfect book, as most of the setting was in Italy.  

Beginning in the year, 2000, life happened, and for about ten years I struggled to read the daily newspaper.  To have read a book would have not been possible.  My husband was diagnosed with Myasthenia Gravis and Primary Biliary Cirrhosis of the Liver.  I had Two Total Knee Replacements and a Fibromyalgia diagnosis.
My sister and I were fast becoming caregivers for our mother.  Our sweet mother went to heaven on April 9, 2013.  I had never not   been able to read.  It was just too much.....my mind could not focus
long enough to read.
I would think about it and miss that so enjoyable part of my life.  At the same time trusting that my soul, heart, and mind would be healed.

It is happening.....my life is simpler this January.  
I'm going to read Pat Conroy and love every minute!


About Pat ConroyPat Conroy

Biography

Pat Conroy, born in Atlanta in 1945, was the first of seven children of a young career military officer from Chicago and a Southern beauty from Alabama, to whom Pat often credits for his love of language. The Conroys moved frequently to military bases throughout the South, with Conroy eventually attending The Citadel Military Academy in Charleston, South Carolina, where, as a student, he published his first boohe Boo, a tribute to a beloved teacher. Following graduation, Conroy taught English in Beaufort, where he met and married a young mother of two children who had been widowed during the Vietnam War.
He soon took a job teaching underprivileged children in a one-room schoolhouse on Daufuskie Island off the South Carolina shore but, after a year, was fired for his unconventional teaching practices – such as his refusal to allow corporal punishment of his students – and for his personal differences with the school's administration. Conroy was never to teach again but he evened the score by exposing the racism and appalling conditions his students endured with the publication of a memoir, The Water is Wide published in 1972. The book won Conroy a humanitarian award from the National Education Association and was made into the feature film Conrack.
Following the birth of a daughter, the Conroys moved to Atlanta, where Pat wrote his novel, The Great Santini, published in 1976, and later made into a film starring Robert Duvall, that explored the conflicts of the author's childhood, particularly his ambivalent love for his violent and abusive father. The publication of a book that so painfully exposed his family's secret brought Conroy a period of tremendous personal desolation. This crisis resulted not only in his divorce, but the divorce of his parents; his mother presented a copy of The Great Santini to the judge as "evidence" in divorce proceedings against his father.
The Citadel became the subject of his next novel, The Lords of Discipline, published in 1980. The novel exposed the school's harsh military discipline and racism.
Conroy remarried and moved from Atlanta to Rome, where he began The Prince of Tides, which, when published in 1986, became his most successful book. Reviewers immediately acknowledged Conroy as a master storyteller and a poetic and gifted prose stylist. This novel has become one of the most beloved novels of modern time. With over five million copies in print, it has earned Conroy an international reputation. The Prince of Tides was later made into a highly successful feature film directed by and starring Barbra Streisand, as well as actor Nick Nolte, whose performance won him an Oscar nomination.
Beach Music (1995), Conroy's sixth book, was the story of Jack McCall, an American who moves to Rome to escape the trauma and painful memory of his young wife's suicidal leap off a bridge in South Carolina. While he was on tour for Beach Music, members of his Citadel basketball team began appearing, one by one, at his book signings around the country, Conroy realized that his team members had come back into his life just when he needed them most. He began reconstructing his senior year, his last year as an athlete, and the 21 basketball games that changed his life. The result of these recollections, along with his insights into his early aspirations as a writer, became My Losing Season.
Conroy's fifth novel and ninth book, South of father in the character of Leo Bloom King, the story's central figure.
He followed the novel with The Pat Conroy Cookbook. His next book, My Reading Life, published in 2010, is a celebration of reading and the books that most influenced him. In his next book, The Death of Santini, a memoir scheduled to be published on October 30, 2013, Conroy revisits one last time his tortured family, where he describes his father's surprising evolution into a father he could finally love.
Conroy currently lives in Beaufort, South Carolina with his wife, novelist Cassandra King.



#13342   This biography was copied from Pat Conway's blog.

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