āForrest Gumpā author Winston Groom dead at 77
Winston Groom in a 2014 file photo. The author of "Forrest Gump" died Wednesday.
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By William Thornton | wthornton@al.com
Winston Groom, the author of āForrest Gump,ā as well as several acclaimed novels and histories, died Wednesday at the age of 77.
Groom died in Fairhope, according to Fairhope Mayor Karin Wilson.
A native of Washington, D.C., Groom grew up in Mobile County and attended UMS-Wright and the University of Alabama before serving in Vietnam. His life at some points paralleled that of his most famous character.
After Vietnam, he seriously began to pursue a career in writing. In a 2000 piece for the Washington Post, Groom recalled his early days a reporter.
āI got a job in Washington at the old Washington Star and, as the lowest-ranking reporter on the staff, had the duty on many occasions of going out to the demonstrations to do a āhead count.ā How you count the heads of 250,000 people in motion, I still do not know, but somehow we came up with the numbers,ā he wrote.
At the Star, āeverybody had a brown bag with whiskey in it and an unfinished manuscript,ā he recalled, but while there, he grew close to Willie Morris, and met āCatch-22ā author Joseph Heller, āSlaughterhouse Fiveā author Kurt Vonnegut and James Jones, author of āFrom Here to Eternity.ā
In a 2016 interview for his novel, āEl Paso,ā Groom described himself as just an āold-timeyā guy who wanted to give readers a novel rooted in action, rather than introspection.
āI always say, if you want to send a message, call Western Union,ā he said. His 1982 book, āConversations with the Enemy,ā was a Pulitzer Prize finalist.
Groom wrote eight novels, but none more famous than one centered around an unlikely hero from Alabama. Groom created the character of Forrest Gump, he said in 1994, after he and his father had enjoyed a weekend visit together. His father, in his eighties, told him of a neighborhood boy who was called āslowā but could play a piano brilliantly.
That same night, he began writing the book, which he said ājust wrote itself.ā He finished the first draft six weeks later. He wanted to the character to have dignity, which he said later was the reason the story appealed to people.
āThere were times I would just laugh out loud while writing the book. It was great fun to write, and I grew to really love the character," he said.
āForrest Gump,ā published in 1986, went on to become a huge box-office hit in 1994 and a pop culture sensation, with Groomās character interacting with presidents and obliviously wandering into various touchstone moments for Baby Boomers. With Tom Hanks in the title role, the film won Best Picture at the Academy Awards.
Groom gave the world a sequel, āGump & Co.,ā as well as a history of University of Alabama football, āThe Crimson Tide.ā He also wrote several military histories and books about the West and the Civil War.
Winston Groom in a 2014 file photo. The author of "Forrest Gump" died Wednesday.
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By William Thornton | wthornton@al.com
Winston Groom, the author of āForrest Gump,ā as well as several acclaimed novels and histories, died Wednesday at the age of 77.
Groom died in Fairhope, according to Fairhope Mayor Karin Wilson.
A native of Washington, D.C., Groom grew up in Mobile County and attended UMS-Wright and the University of Alabama before serving in Vietnam. His life at some points paralleled that of his most famous character.
After Vietnam, he seriously began to pursue a career in writing. In a 2000 piece for the Washington Post, Groom recalled his early days a reporter.
āI got a job in Washington at the old Washington Star and, as the lowest-ranking reporter on the staff, had the duty on many occasions of going out to the demonstrations to do a āhead count.ā How you count the heads of 250,000 people in motion, I still do not know, but somehow we came up with the numbers,ā he wrote.
At the Star, āeverybody had a brown bag with whiskey in it and an unfinished manuscript,ā he recalled, but while there, he grew close to Willie Morris, and met āCatch-22ā author Joseph Heller, āSlaughterhouse Fiveā author Kurt Vonnegut and James Jones, author of āFrom Here to Eternity.ā
In a 2016 interview for his novel, āEl Paso,ā Groom described himself as just an āold-timeyā guy who wanted to give readers a novel rooted in action, rather than introspection.
āI always say, if you want to send a message, call Western Union,ā he said. His 1982 book, āConversations with the Enemy,ā was a Pulitzer Prize finalist.
Groom wrote eight novels, but none more famous than one centered around an unlikely hero from Alabama. Groom created the character of Forrest Gump, he said in 1994, after he and his father had enjoyed a weekend visit together. His father, in his eighties, told him of a neighborhood boy who was called āslowā but could play a piano brilliantly.
That same night, he began writing the book, which he said ājust wrote itself.ā He finished the first draft six weeks later. He wanted to the character to have dignity, which he said later was the reason the story appealed to people.
āThere were times I would just laugh out loud while writing the book. It was great fun to write, and I grew to really love the character," he said.
āForrest Gump,ā published in 1986, went on to become a huge box-office hit in 1994 and a pop culture sensation, with Groomās character interacting with presidents and obliviously wandering into various touchstone moments for Baby Boomers. With Tom Hanks in the title role, the film won Best Picture at the Academy Awards.
Groom gave the world a sequel, āGump & Co.,ā as well as a history of University of Alabama football, āThe Crimson Tide.ā He also wrote several military histories and books about the West and the Civil War.