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Famous Like Me > Writer > S > Robert Stone

Profile of Robert Stone on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Robert Stone  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 21st August 1937
   
Place of Birth: Brooklyn, New York, USA
   
Profession: Writer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
This article is about the novelist. For the rugby league player, see Robert Stone (rugby league).
Photo of Robert Stone by Robert Birnbaum

Robert Stone (born August 21, 1937) is a critically well regarded American novelist, whose work is typically characterized by psychological complexity, political concerns, and dark humor.

Stone was born in Brooklyn, New York. Until the age of six he was raised by his mother, who suffered from schizophrenia; after she was institutionalized, he spent several years in a Catholic orphanage.

He dropped out of high school in 1954 and joined the Navy for four years, where he worked as a journalist. In the early 1960s, he briefly attended New York University; worked as a copyboy at the New York Daily News; married and moved to New Orleans; attended a workshop with Wallace Stegner in San Francisco, where he began writing a novel; met the influential Beat Generation writer Ken Kesey and travelled with the Merry Pranksters, before returning to New York.

In 1967 Stone published his first novel, A Hall of Mirrors, which won a William Faulkner Foundation award for best first novel. Set in New Orleans in 1962 and based partly on actual events, the novel depicted a political scene dominated by right-wing racism, but its style was more reminiscent of Beat writers than of earlier social realists: alternating between naturalism and stream of consciousness, with a large cast of often psychologically unstable characters, it set the template for much of Stone's later writing. It was adapted into the 1970 film WUSA. The novel's success led to a Guggenheim Fellowship and began Stone's career as a professional writer and teacher.

His second novel, Dog Soldiers (1974), was a thriller of sorts about a journalist smuggling heroin from Vietnam (where Stone had briefly travelled as a war correspondent in 1971). It won the 1975 National Book Award, and was also adapted into a film, Who'll Stop the Rain.

A Flag for Sunrise (1981) made Stone's left-wing politics even more explicit than in his earlier work, portraying a fictional Central American country in which U.S.-backed forces commit atrocities to suppress a Marxist revolution; it won a PEN/Faulkner Award. His next two novels focused on smaller-scale conflicts: the psychotic breakdown of a movie actress in Children of Light (Stone's least critically successful novel), and a circumnavigation race in Outerbridge Reach (based loosely on the story of Donald Crowhurst). He returned to current events with Damascus Gate (1998), about a man with messianic delusions caught up in a terrorist plot in Jerusalem.

Stone currently lives in New York with his wife. He has two children.

External Links

  • Audio Interviews with Robert Stone - RealAudio

Bibliography

  • 1967: A Hall of Mirrors
  • 1974: Dog Soldiers
  • 1981: A Flag for Sunrise
  • 1986: Children of Light
  • 1992: Outerbridge Reach
  • 1997: Bear and His Daughter (short stories)
  • 1998: Damascus Gate
  • 2003: Bay of Souls

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Robert Stone