Ava's Man

Abridged
Author: Rick Bragg
Narrator: Rick Bragg
Genres: History, Biographies, United States, Memoirs
Publisher: Random House (Audio)
Date: August 2001
Length: 6 hours
Ratings:
  • Book Rating: 4/5
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author of All Over But the Shoutin' continues his personal history of the Deep South with an evocation of his monther's childhood in the Appalachian foothills during the Great Depression, and the magnificent story of the man who raised her.

Rick Bragg brings his astonishing gift for storytelling to the tale of his grandfather, a man who kept his family one step ahead of poverty and starvation. Charlie Bundrum was a roofer, a carpenter, a bootlegger, and a fisherman. He could not read but he asked his wife, Ava, to read him the paper every day so he would not be ignorant. He was aman who took giant steps in rundown boots, a true hero whom history would have otherwise overlooked.

A portrait of an ineradicably memorable figure in a singular time, a moving reflection on home and family and on the author's own connection to a lost stretch of dirt road along the Alabama-Georgia border—Ava's Man is Rick Bragg at his stunning best.

Reviews (9)

Not my idea of a hero

Written by Anonymous on August 30th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Well written but a hollow hero figure. The writer tries to equate a Southern hillbilly with being a "man" and further, a hero. Perhaps he was a hero among hillbillies because he loved his family and kept them fed during difficult times but it seems more like a personal narrative of the author's need to validate his roots.

Really enjoyed this book

Written by Lisa from Berkeley, CA on August 28th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I'm a newcomer to Rick Bragg, but a convert after thoroughly enjoying this moving, vibrant, well-written book as read (lyrically in southern accent splendor) by the author. I'm moving on to 'All Over But the Shouting' next.

Ava's Man

Written by Anonymous from Chicago, IL on September 18th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This was a delightful book that had me wishing traffic in Chicago was worse than it is! Author Bragg's voice is charming and it really welcomed me into his family's world.

Ava's Man

Written by Renee Locks on July 22nd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I loved every word of this book and Rick Bragg's reading is warm, true, human and humorous. It left me full of regard for the deepest ethics of the human heart. Rick Bragg is so one of a kind I look forward to whatever stories he tells. I give it at least 5 stars times 2.

Ava's Man

Written by Lari Tonti on December 11th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

5 stars are not enough. I really enjoyed this book one of my favorite. What made it even more interesting is my Best Friend in Ga. still uses some of the same sayings. She had no idea she was audio material.Talk about bringing a book to life. Rent it and enjoy,,,

The Legend of Charlie Bundrum

Written by Orville Amazor from Fullerton, CA on September 9th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Ava's Man is a true and touching story of a man who loves his family just a bit more than the moonshine he brews out in the woods. The narration takes you to that time and place and endears the reader to Charlie, Ava, Hootie, and the whole brood of children that come along through the years. Fun to listen to with lessons on every "page"; thank you Rick Bragg for getting to know your grandfather so well and for sharing him with the rest of us. One of the best audiobooks available!!

Ava's Man

Written by Sandy K. on August 25th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Loved this book. Listening to the Author read it was like sitting at his feet and being told a grand family legend....

Ava's Man

Written by Varin Acevedo from San Diego CA, CA on March 21st, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

There's more analogies in this book than fleas on a yeller-haired dog. If you have a hankering to know 'bout life in them thar hills, than this is the book for you.

Ava's Man

Written by Cathy Rowan on March 14th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This was the most entertaining book I have rented from Simply Audiobooks. Both my spouse and I could start at any point and immediately get into the story. Laughed a lot while listening to it on California's wonderful freeway system. True, heartwarming story with lots of ethics.... for those who can take it.

Author Details

Author Details

Bragg, Rick

"My Grandfather on my daddy's side and my grandma on my momma's side used to try and cuss their miseries away. They could out-cuss any damn body I have ever seen. I am only an amateur cusser at best, but I inherited other things from these people who grew up on the ridges and deep in the hollows of northeastern Alabama, the foothills of the Appalachians. They taught me, on a thousand front porch nights, as a million jugs passed from hand to hand, how to tell a story.

I make my living at it now, as a national correspondent for The New York Times, based in my native South (Atlanta). It was my dream to do this someday, but some things even I was afraid to dream.

In 1996, I was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing, for what the judges called ""elegantly written stories on contemporary America."" They included stories on the country sheriff who caught Susan Smith, an Alabama prison where old inmates go to die, a Mississippi washerwoman who became a national hero, and the nightmare bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City. I also won the prestigious American Society of Newspaper Editor's Distinguished Writing Award, for the second time. I have won more than 40 journalism awards, including several awards that might have actually helped people.

But the best thing that happened to me in 1996 was the contract for this book (All Over But The Shoutin'), which allowed me to keep a promise I had made to my mother--a woman who picked cotton, scrubbed floors and took in washing and ironing--who went 18 years without a new dress so I could have school clothes.

With the advance from this book, I bought her a house, the first house she ever owned.

I teach writing at the Poynter Institute for media studies, at National Writers Workshops around the country. I taught some workshops at Harvard, and several newspapers have asked me to do in-house writing workshops, including The Times.

My stories are included in several ""best of"" collections of newspaper writing. I have written for the New York Times Sunday Magazine, and others.

For good or bad, I am kind of unusual for a Times man. I have been at The Times for just three years, for the first six months on Metro in New York, writing about the homeless, violence, welfare hotels, other miseries, then covered Haiti for more than two months during the worst of the killing there in the late summer and the fall of 1994. I came home to find that I had been promoted to the national desk. They sent me home, almost, to Atlanta.

Before The Times, I worked briefly at The Los Angeles Times, a failed experiment, and before that as a roving national correspondent for the St. Petersburg Times.

In 1992-93, I was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, the only real college I ever had. I think I was filling their white trash quota. I went just six months to Jacksonville State University, in Alabama, in the 1970s.

Before the Nieman, I was the St. Petersburg Times Miami Bureau Chief, covering south Florida, Haiti, the outbreak of the Gulf War, and other balmy places. Before Florida, I was a reporter in my native Alabama, at The Birmingham News, Anniston Star, Talladega Daily Home and Jacksonville News. I wrote about cockfights, speed trap towns, serial killers, George Wallace, Bear Bryant, and Richard Petty.

I was born in a small town hospital in northeastern Alabama on July 26, 1959. My momma went into labor about three-quarters of the way through the ""Ten Commandments,"" which was showing at the Midway Drive-In. I am not making this up. I think it's in Chapter Four.

Since then, I have lived in Jacksonville, Anniston and Birmingham, all in Alabama, in Clearwater, Bradenton, Miami and St. Petersburg, in Florida, and Cambridge, Massachusetts, Los Angeles, the corner of 110th and Broadway, New York City, and now Atlanta. I spend at least a quarter of the year in New Orleans, for The Times.

I am seldom at home. I am not married. If I had a dog, it would starve. "