Howard Frank Mosher Popular Books

Howard Frank Mosher Biography & Facts

Howard Frank Mosher (June 2, 1942 – January 29, 2017) was an American author of thirteen books: eleven fiction and two non-fiction. Much of his fiction takes place in the mid-20th century and all of it is set in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont, a region loosely defined by the three counties in the northeastern corner of the state (Essex, Orleans, and Caledonia). His characters are often quirky, reflecting the distinctive peculiarities of the region's taciturn residents. The community struggle with changing times is often a theme, with the more traditional ways of rural Yankee life coming in conflict with an expanding, modern society. The last novel published during his lifetime was God's Kingdom (St. Martin's Press, October 2015). Personal life Mosher graduated from Cato-Meridian Central School, in Cato, New York, in 1960 and from Syracuse University in 1964. He taught English at Orleans High and Lake Region Union High School during his early years. Mosher lived with his wife, Phillis, in Irasburg, Vermont. They had a grown son and a daughter. He was a die-hard Red Sox fan, and this was a recurring element in his work. Mosher often developed a fictional character (usually still in boyhood) who would become obsessed with the fate of the Red Sox. Death In December 2016, Mosher was ill with what he believed to be an upper respiratory ailment. He was soon diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer, induced from treatment of prostate cancer in 2007. Mosher announced his latest cancer via his Facebook page. He died at home on January 29, 2017, at age 74. Awards Mosher was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1979, and is the 1981 recipient of the Literature Award bestowed by the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. A Stranger In the Kingdom won the New England Book Award for Fiction in 1991, and was later made into a 1997 feature film of the same name by director Jay Craven. Craven has also adapted Disappearances, Where the Rivers Flow North and Northern Borders to film. In 2006, Mosher received the Vermont Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts. In 2011 he was awarded the New England Independent Booksellers Association's President's Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts. Bibliography His books, in order of publication, are: Disappearances (1977) Where the Rivers Flow North (1978) Marie Blythe (1983) A Stranger in the Kingdom (1989) Northern Borders (1994) North Country (nonfiction, 1997) The Fall of the Year (1999) The True Account (2003) Waiting for Teddy Williams (2004) On Kingdom Mountain (2007) Walking to Gatlinburg (2010) The Great Northern Express (nonfiction, 2012) God's Kingdom (2015) Points North: Stories (2018) References External links Howard Frank Mosher Official Website 2007 interview with The Optimistic Curmudgeon. Discover the Howard Frank Mosher popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Howard Frank Mosher books.

Best Seller Howard Frank Mosher Books of 2024

  • A Floating Life synopsis, comments

    A Floating Life

    Tad Crawford

    A Floating Life will delight lovers of Kafka, Murakami, and the magic realism of Gabriel García Márquez. A nameless narrator awakens to the muddle of middle age, no longer certain ...

  • Cheatgrass synopsis, comments

    Cheatgrass

    Bart Paul

    The followup to Under Tower Peak is another taut, fastmoving thriller that builds to an explosive, actionfilled conclusion.Under Tower Peak was acclaimed by the Wall Street Journal...

  • The Essay synopsis, comments

    The Essay

    Robin Yocum

    Jimmy Lee Hickam grew up along Red Dog Road, a deadend strip of gravel and mud buried deep in the bowels of Appalachian Ohio. It is the poorest road, in the poorest county, in the ...

  • Little Bighorn synopsis, comments

    Little Bighorn

    John Hough

    Little Bighorn is the beautifully written, uniquely American story of the comingofage of eighteenyearold Allen Winslow during the Battle of the Little Bighorn and the fraught weeks...

  • Lies the Mushroom Pickers Told synopsis, comments

    Lies the Mushroom Pickers Told

    Tom Phelan

    Part human comedy and part mystery, Lies the Mushroom Pickers Told is an enthralling, masterful story about what holds a village together and what keeps people apart. When journali...