Ian Frazier
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Ian "Sandy" Frazier | |
|---|---|
| Born | Ian Frazier |
| Occupation | Non-fiction writer, Humorist |
| Nationality | American |
| Writing period | 1974—present |
| Notable work(s) | Great Plans (1989) Coyote v. Acme (1996) |
Ian Frazier (b.1951 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American writer and humorist. He is best known for his 1989 non-fiction history Great Plains, and as a writer and humorist for The New Yorker.
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[edit] Background and education
Frazier grew up in Hudson, Ohio; his father worked as a chemist for Sohio[1]; his mother was an amateur actor, performing and directing plays in local Ohio theaters.[2] Frazier attended Western Reserve Academy, and later Harvard University, where he was on the staff of the Harvard Lampoon. He graduated in 1973.
[edit] Career
[edit] Early years
After graduating from Harvard, Frazier worked briefly as a writer for a magazine owned by Playboy in Chicago[3]The following year, he moved to New York City and joined the staff of The New Yorker magazine, where he wrote feature articles, humorous sketches, and pieces for "The Talk of the Town" section.
[edit] The Great Plains and Great Plains
In 1982, Frazier moved to Montana and, through travels and library research, began collecting materials, anecdotes and impressions that would later become 1989's Great Plains. He returned to the region in the later 1990s to research his Native American book On the Rez.
[edit] Style
In his nonfiction books such as Great Plains, Family, and On the Rez, Frazier combines first-person narrative with in-depth research on topics including American history, Native Americans, fishing, and the outdoors. Frazier is among the best modern exponents of The New Yorker's style of level-headed, matter-of-fact lyricism; a good strong example is these final lines from the 1985 essay "Bear News," reprinted in his 1987 collection Nobody Better, Better than Nobody.[4]
- Beautiful scenery makes its point quickly; then you have to pay attention, or it starts to slide by like a loop of background on a Saturday-morning cartoon... When you see a bear, the spot where you see it becomes instantly different from every place else you've seen. Bears make you pay attention. They keep the mountains from turning into a blur, and they stop your self from bullying you like nothing else in nature. A woods with a bear in it is real to a man walking through it in a way that a woods with no bear is not. Roscoe Black, a man who survived a serious attack by a grizzly in Glacier Park several years ago, described the moment when the bear had him on the ground: "He laid on me for a few seconds, not doing anything...I could feel his heart beating against my heart." The idea of that heart beating someplace just the other side of ours is what makes people read about bears and tell stories about bears and theorize about bears and argue about bears and dream about bears. Bears are one of the places in the world where big mysteries run close to the surface.
Frazier is also an exceptionally accomplished and inventive humorist. Reviewing his 1996 humor collection (the title piece, Coyote v. Acme, can be found here; it's Wile E. Coyote suing the manufacturer of various rocket-propelled devices) in The New York Times, the critic James Gorman described it as the occasion for "irrepressible laughter in the reader." Gorman rates Frazier's first collection, 1986's Dating Your Mom, as "one of the best collections of humor ever published."[5]
[edit] Personal
Since departing the Great Plains, Frazier has lived in Brooklyn, New York, and Montclair, New Jersey with his wife, the author Jacqueline Carey, and their two children, Cora, 18, and Thomas, 15.
Frazier's most autobiographical work is Family.
[edit] Books
[edit] Humor
- Dating Your Mom (1986)
- Coyote v. Acme (1996)
- Lamentations of the Father (FSG, 2008)[1]
[edit] Essay collections
- Nobody Better, Better than Nobody (1987)
- The Fish's Eye (2002)
[edit] Translation
- It Happened Like This (1998)
[edit] Non-fiction
- Great Plains (1989)
- Family (1994)
- On the Rez (2000)
- Gone to New York: Adventures in the City (2005)
[edit] References
- ^ Ian Frazier, Family. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1994. p. 256.
- ^ Ian Frazier, Family. p. 26.
- ^ Ian Frazier. Family. p. 351.
- ^ Ian Frazier, Nobody Better, Better than Nobody," New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1987. p. 149-50.
- ^ James Gorman, "Beep-Beep!", The New York Times, June 23, 1996.
[edit] External links
- Ian Frazier at FSG
- Interview with Ian Frazier on WFMU's "The Speakeasy with Dorian" (RealAudio)
- Review of Gone to New York
- 1989 interview with Ian Frazier by Don Swaim at Wired for Books.
- Select the Real Audio link by "LAMENTATIONS OF A FATHER" at time 28:42 to hear Ian Frazier read his "Laws Concerning Food and Drink; Household Principles; Lamentations of the Father" on the January 24, 1998 Prairie Home Companion broadcast.
- The famous mock-legal complaint Coyote v. Acme, to which a lawyer made this reply

