Mary Ward Brown (June 18, 1917 – May 14, 2013) was an American short story writer and memoirist. Her works largely feature Alabama as a setting and have received several awards.
Her first collection of short stories, Tongues of Flame, published in 1986, won the PEN/Hemingway (1987), the Alabama Author Award (1987), the Lillian Smith Book Award (1991), and the Hillsdale Fiction Prize (2003).[3] Following her second collection of short stories, It Wasn't All Dancing, published in 2002, Brown was awarded the Alabama Library Author Award (2003), the Hillsdale Award for Fiction (2003), and the Harper Lee Award (2002).[4]
Author Paul Theroux has said of her writing that it was "...direct, unaffected, unsentimental, and powerful for its simplicity and for its revealing the inner life of rural Alabama...".[5] Her story "Cure" was included in The Best American Short Stories 1984 (edited by John Updike & Shannon Ravenel).[6] Southern journalist John S. Sledge called Brown "our genius, our Chekov".[7]
^Dickson, Foster (May 20, 2013). "Mary Ward Brown". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Alabama Humanities Foundation. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved May 25, 2015.