Jo Ann Beard
Jo Ann Beard is an American essayist.
Life
Beard was born in 1955, Chicago, IL. Beard graduated from the University of Iowa with a BFA and MA. She teaches at Sarah Lawrence College.[1]
She worked as an editor for a physics journal at the University of Iowa and was a colleague of the victims of the University of Iowa shooting, which became a subject for her work. Her writing has appeared in Tin House,[2] and The New Yorker.
Awards
- 1997 Whiting Award
- 2005 Guggenheim Fellow [3]
Works
Essays
- "The Fourth State of Matter," The New Yorker, June 24 1996
- "Undertaker, Please Drive Slow," Tin House, Issue #12, Summer 2002[4]
- "Maybe It Happened", O, The Oprah Magazine, August 2008
- "The Longest Night: Saying Goodbye to My Beloved Pet," O, The Oprah Magazine, June 2009
Books
- The Boys of My Youth. Little Brown & Co. 1999. ISBN 978-0-316-08525-0.
- In Zanesville. 2011.
The Boys of My Youth
The Boys of my Youth, Jo Ann Beard's memoir, focuses on the defining moments of her life, written with strong detail and captivating memories. Each chapter scans over a certain aspect, as she creates the sceneries and emotions to match. It's a personal narrative that gets a closer look on her feelings towards the things that had come and gone in her life like her friends, family, her favorite toy Hal, and of course, the boys. She manipulates imagery in such a way that makes the memoir more personal, relatable, and in many ways interactive. Her glances at different parts of her life are captivating, and are set into autobiographical essays about youth and adulthood. There is strong detail on the struggles of life, such as death, acceptance, divorce, and uncertainty, but she also justifies the pleasures, like friendship, relationships, childhood, and the beauty of memories. The book does not go in chronological order. She skips around in her life, grouping events that share a common theme or focus, and ties it together with its ultimate lesson or effect on her. It is fair to say that the memoir is just a story about a young girl in the midwest often finding herself stuck in her own mistakes and fears, but written in a way that can be reflective to many others in how she deals with them. Referring to the title, The Boys of my Youth, various crushes in her younger years play a large role in the book. There were the short-lasting relationships in dark bars, and longer relationships. This is a contrast throughout the book. She refers to small memories, like being in a parade as a little girl, and really important ones, like the murder case of six victims, where she was the friend of one of the victims and of the shooter. It just so happened that she left the school earlier than usual the day the event occurred. She talks about her emotional involvement in serious moments like this. There is the detailed background, and the forward, intentional feel to all of her stories. A few of her chapters have appeared in The New Yorker.
She starts the book by describing an incident from when she was young, about a family vacation. She describes how she isn't allowed to swim, and a group of teens go rushing by on a current and yell out for help, but she is dumbfounded and cannot help. The chapter ends with a teen shaking and saying that he thought his last memory would be her. She then moves on, explaining her relationship with her grandparents. Her grandmother remarries a year after the death of her maternal grandfather, to a man named Ralph. He slaughters livestock and she comes along with him on his trips. Her grandmother, on the other hand, she pities. She is a volunteer helper for the old and disabled. She cannot understand how they can live their boring lives without going insane. She doesn't understand how she voluntarily stays with them each summer. The next chapter explains her relationship with her older cousin, whom she calls Wendell. She obviously adores Wendell, based on the way she describes her grace and beauty while they are driving down the road, singing to the radio.
Anthologies
- Ian Frazier, Robert Atwan, eds. (1997). Best American Essays of 1997. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-85694-9.
- David Foster Wallace, Robert Atwan, eds. (October 10, 2007). The Best American Essays 2007. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-70927-4.
- Lex Williford, Michael Martone, eds. (2007). "The Fourth State of Matter". Touchstone anthology of contemporary creative nonfiction: work from 1970 to the present. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4165-3174-6.
- Marybeth Bond, Pamela Michael, eds. (2004). "Out There". A Woman's Passion for Travel: True Stories of World Wanderlust. Travelers' Tales. ISBN 978-1-932361-14-8.
References
External links
- "Meet a rare creature: the wholly talented, wholly modest Jo Ann Beard", Book Page, February 1998 Failed link
- "A Conversation with Jo Ann Beard", nidus, No. 3 Fall 2002 Failed link
- "Jo Ann Beard Interviewed by Michael Gardner" Mary Literary Journal Failed link
- Profile at The Whiting Foundation