Bob Brown (writer, poet, publisher)

For other people named Bob Brown, see Bob Brown (disambiguation)

Bob Brown
Born (1886-06-14)June 14, 1886
Oak Park, Illinois, United States
Died August 7, 1959(1959-08-07) (aged 73)
New York City, New York, United States
Occupation Writer, poet, publisher
Nationality American
Literary movement Modernism, Avant-Garde
Notable works What Happened to Mary?;
The Remarkable Adventures of Christopher Poe;
My Marjonary;
The Readies;
The Complete Book of Cheese
Spouse Lillian Fox Brown
Rose Watson Brown
Eleanor Wilson Parker Brown

Robert 'Bob' Carlton Brown, II (June 14, 1886 – August 7, 1959) was an American writer and publisher in many forms from comic squibs to magazine fiction to advertising to avant-garde poetry to business news to cookbooks to political tracts to novelized memoirs to parodies and much more.

Life and Work

In the first two decades of the twentieth century, Brown was a bestselling fiction writer and found great commercial success selling his stories to magazines and with his novelizations of those serialized magazines stories collected as What Happened to Mary? (1913) and The Remarkable Adventures of Christopher Poe (1913). He also published bohemian poetry when he and his second wife, Rose, became central figures in Greenwich Village’s bohemian arts and culture scene. As part of his work with The Masses, Brown also became a fund-raising impresario staging balls and costume parties at Webster Hall.

With the start of World War I, the Browns were forced into exile, first to Mexico for a year with other war resisters called Slackers. Later they eventually made their way to Brazil where they started an international business news publishing empire. Using the profits from their business, they traveled around the world in the mid-1920s, spending about a year in China. In 1928, they located to Europe to join the expatriate avant-garde group in France, which included Gertrude Stein, Kay Boyle, and Nancy Cunard. They entertained cultural figures from Emma Goldman to Charlie Chaplin. Brown founded Roving Eye Press, a press dedicated to publishing mostly his own experimental writings. His most famous works at this time include his manifestos and experimental demonstrations, including in The Readies (1930) and Words (1931), for his reading machine and the processed texts that would revolutionize reading.

With the economic depression in the 1930s, the Browns, including Cora, Rose, and Bob, eventually moved back to the United States writing bestselling cookbooks to make a living . They wrote over twenty cookbooks, such as Cooking with Wine (1934), 10,000 Snacks (1934), and The Complete Book of Cheese (1955). The Browns simultaneously worked on a commune, and joined the faculty at the radical Commonwealth College; Bob also helped start the Writer’s Guild and organized summer writing trips to the Soviet Union.

In the 1940s, after Cora died, Bob and Rose became writers in Hollywood; they wrote numerous story treatments for the movie industry, and used advances and fees to fund travel to the Amazon. They published a colorful memoir about their travels and collected artifacts, which they later donated to museums in Brazil and the United States (in Los Angeles). They eventually moved back to Brazil in the mid-1940s, and Rose published a few young adult history books.

In the mid-1950s, Bob moved back to the United States after Rose died. He married his old friend Eleanor, and they restarted Roving Eye Press as well as publishing cookbooks, selling rare and unusual books, and publishing works with the Beat poets.

Legacy

In his manifesto to The Readies, Bob Brown wrote, "The written word hasn't kept up with the age . . . We have the talkies, but as yet no Readies." Brown has been called the "Godfather of the E-Reader" by Jennifer Schuessler.[1] In his monograph Black Riders, Jerome McGann refers to him as "the visual tradition's most important modernist practitioner and theorist".[2] Scholars Craig Dworkin and Michael North have also situated Brown's work in relation to the traditions of experimental poetry and photography and cinema respectively.[3]

In 2014, scholar Craig Saper restarted Brown's Roving Eye Press with a group of scholars, artists, and Brown descendants. Saper had previously written numerous articles on Brown and aesthetics, publishing and reading and had even created a digital simulation of Brown's concept for a reading machine. With this global collective in place, the small press started to reprint a number of Brown's most experimental works from the 1930s, including The Readies, Words, and Gems: A Censored Anthology. The press also offered selected publications for free download on their website.[4] Saper was solicited to write new introductions to each title in the first series of titles published. In 2016, Saper published the first biography of Brown entitled, The Amazing Adventures of Bob Brown: A Real-Life Zelig Who Wrote His Way Through the 20th Century.[5]

Bibliography

With Rose and Cora Brown

References

  1. Schuessler, Jennifer. "Godfather of the E-Reader." New York Times April 8, 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/11/books/review/Schuessler-t.html?pagewanted=all.
  2. Jerome McGann, Black Riders: The Visible Language of Modernism. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993. 84.
  3. Craig Dworkin, Reading the Illegible. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2003; Michael North, Camera Works: Photography and the Twentieth-Century Word . New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.
  4. Roving Eye Press Official website, http://www.rovingeyepress.com/
  5. Craig Saper, The Amazing Adventures of Bob Brown: A Real-Life Zelig Who Wrote His Way Through the 20th Century New York: Fordham University Press, 2016.

Further reading

Dworkin, Craig. Reading the Illegible. Avant-Garde & Modernism Studies. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2003.

North, Michael. Camera Works: Photography and the Twentieth-Century Word. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.

Rothenberg, Jerome. Revolution of the Word; a New Gathering of American Avant Garde Poetry, 1914-1945. New York: Seabury Press, 1974.

Pressman, Jessica. Digital Modernism: Making It New in New Media. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014.

McGann, Jerome J. Black Riders: The Visible Language of Modernism. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993.

Saper, Craig J. The Amazing Adventures of Bob Brown: A Real-life Zelig Who Wrote his Way Through the 20th Century. New York: Fordham University Press (Empire State Editions), 2016.

- - -. Bob Brown's Reading Machine: Abbreviated Writing and Browsers Fifty Years Before Txt, Tweets, and WWW" (Introduction). The Readies. By Bob Brown. 1930. Baltimore, MD: Roving Eye Press, 2014. vii-xxxvi.

- - -. “Book Type Machine: From Bob Brown's Reading Machine to Electronic Simulations, 1930-2010.” Bonefolder: An E-journal for the Bookbinder and Bookartist 6.1 (2009): 19-24.

- - -. "For Words" (Introduction). Words: I but Bend My Finger in a Beckon and Words, Birds of Words, Hop on It, Chirping. By Bob Brown. 1931. Baltimore, MD: Roving Eye Press, 2014. vii-xxiii.

- - -. Introduction. GEMS: A Censored Anthology. By Bob Brown. 1931. Baltimore, MD: Roving Eye Press, 2014. vii-xviii.

- - -. “A Quick Read(ies): Speed and Formula in Bob Brown's Pulp Fiction and Avant-Garde Machines.” The Popular Avant-Garde. Ed. Renee Silverman. New York: Rodopi, 2010. 175-182.

- - -. “Readies Online.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 5.3 (2011):n. pag.

- - -. “Saudades on the Amazon: Toward a Soft Sweet Name for Involution.” Beyond Globalization: Making New Worlds In Media, Art and Social Practices. Ed. A. Aneesh, Lane Hall, and Patrice Petro. Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2011. 250-273.

- - -. "Scratch & Scrawl: Here Comes Bob Brown" (Introduction). 1450-1950. By Bob Brown. 1930. Baltimore, MD: Roving Eye Press, 2015. xiv-xxiv.

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