Alex Heard 1957-
Major Works
- The Eyes of Willie McGee: A Tragedy of Race,
Sex, and Secrets in the Jim Crow South 2010
- Apocalypse Pretty Soon 1999
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Biography of
Alex Heard
By Wesley Clark (SHS) 1999 See update
below.
Mississippi has been the birthplace for many famous authors.
William Faulkner, perhaps one of America’s greatest authors,
was born in Mississippi. Tennessee Williams was born in Mississippi
as well. Another great author, although less famous, was born
in Jackson, Mississippi. This author, Alex Heard, may not be
as famous as the aforementioned authors, but his work is still
widely read across America.
Born
on October 14, 1957, Alex Heard has become a great author whose
style is loved by many. Alex Heard was born in Jackson, Mississippi
to Kenneth Martin Heard and Lois Pepper Heard. Kenneth Heard,
now deceased, was a pathologist. He grew up in Oxford and went
to The University of Mississippi. Lois Heard is a retired nurse
who grew up in Vaughan, a small town near Canton." (Heard, Alex.
Electronic Mail Interview). Alex has two brothers and a sister.
Ken, the oldest, followed by Julia, and then Malcolm are all
older than Alex (Heard, Julia. Personal Interview). Alex attended
elementary school and junior high in Jackson (Heard, Alex. Electronic
Mail Interview). In 1970 Kenneth Heard got a job and moved the
family to Garden City, Kansas (Heard, Julia).
Alex grew up just like any other normal adolescent boy. He
showed no interest at all in writing at a young age (Heard,
Alex). Although, he had a great imagination and was very creative
as a child. "He could entertain himself for hours." (Heard,
Julia). Alex was somewhat lazy when it came to his schoolwork
in high school. He also had no idea of what he wanted to do
later in life (Heard, Alex. Electronic Mail Interview). He never
started writing seriously until his junior year in college.
"I was simply looking for something to do with myself." (A.
Heard Interview).
Alex enrolled at Fort Hayes State to receive his college degree
(Heard, Julia. Personal Interview). He transferred to
Vanderbilt University in 1978 for his junior year. It was there
where he started writing seriously. "I was an English major
without much of a plan about what I wanted to do. I was lucky
that Vanderbilt had a good English department and great student
publications; otherwise I wouldn't have gotten involved." (Heard).
After graduating from Vanderbilt, Alex had a writing and reporting
internship at the Nashville Tennessean. He was then an
editorial intern at the Washington Monthly, a Washington
D.C. based political magazine. He then became a staff writer
at a weekly newspaper called Education Week. >From 1984
to 1986 he was a freelance writer for various magazines. Among
these magazines was The New York Republic, Harper’s,
and Vanity Fair. Following these jobs, Alex became a
weekly humor columnist for the Washington Post Magazine.
From 1992 to 1996 Alex was the senior editor and a writer for
Outside magazine. Then from 1996 to 1998 he was the senior
editor and a writer for the New York Times Magazine.
Presently Alex is the executive editor for Wired Magazine,
a respected technology magazine (Heard).
During this ten year period, Alex has sporadically worked
on his only major work to date, Apocalypse Pretty Soon: Travels
In End-Time America. For this book he traveled around America
documenting various millennial cults and religious groups with
strange beliefs. Apocalypse Pretty Soon was released
in February of 1999 by W. W. Norton & Company. Alex is not
working on another book at this point, but he is thinking of
writing a novel in the future (Heard).
Alex has many favorite authors. Among these authors are Walker
Percy, Kingsley Amis, Charles Portis, Harper Lee, Joseph Mitchell,
Martin Amis, John Kennedy Toole, and Jack Kerouac. "A lot of
his reading over the years has been oddball books that most
people have never heard of." (Heard, Alex. Electronic Mail Interview).
His favorite books as a child were The Yearling and Huckleberry
Finn. Alex has learned a lot from Ron Rosenbaum. He has
been influenced stylistically by him. Although, Alex spent a
lot of time in college trying to develop his own writing style
(Heard, Alex. Electronic Mail Interview). Alex and his wife
Susan currently live in San Francisco, California. He recently
moved from the east coast to his present location on the west
coast. Alex has no children. Although, "he has a cat named Commander."
(Heard, Julia. Personal Interview).
Alex believes that living in Mississippi has helped him develop
a sense of humor. "Mississippians, in general, have good senses
of humor, and I think I ‘learned how to be funny’
there. My brothers and sister are very funny, so I picked up
a lot from them." (Heard, Alex. Electronic Mail Interview).
"We (Alex’s siblings) were funny. Our family was funny,
but he (Alex) was the funniest." (Heard, Julia. Personal Interview).
Although he has not won any awards for his work, Alex
Heard is a great writer. Many of America’s greatest writers
do not become well recognized until later in life. Alex has
a promising career ahead of him. Even though he is not William
Faulkner or Tennessee Williams, he has contributed greatly to
Mississippi’s history of writers.
2010 UPDATE: In 2010,
Harper Collins published Alex Heard's The Eyes of
Willie MaGee. According to the press release for
the non-fiction work, Heard's story is about Willie McGee, a
young African-American man from Laurel, Mississippi, who in
1945 was "sentenced to death for allegedly raping Willette
Hawkins, a white housewife. At first, McGee's case was barely
noticed, covered only in hostile Mississippi newspapers and
far-left publications such as the Daily
Worker. Then Bella Abzug, a young
New York labor lawyer, was hired by the Civil Rights Congress--an
aggressive civil rights organization with ties to the Communist
Party of the United States--to oversee McGee's defense. Together
with William Patterson, the son of a slave and a devout believer
in the need for revolutionary change, Abzug and a group of white
Mississippi lawyers risked their lives to plead McGee's case.
After years of court battles, McGee's supporters flooded President
Harry S. Truman and the U.S. Supreme Court with clemency pleas,
and famous Americans--including William Faulkner, Albert Einstein,
Jessica Mitford, Paul Robeson, Norman Mailer, and Josephine
Baker--spoke out on McGee's behalf.
By the time the case ended in 1951 with McGee's public execution
in Mississippi's infamous traveling electric chair, "Free
Willie McGee" had become a rallying cry among civil rights
activists, progressives, leftists, and Communist Party members.
Their movement had succeeded in convincing millions of people
worldwide that McGee had been framed and that the real story
involved a consensual love affair between him and Mrs. Hawkins--one
that she had instigated and controlled. As Heard discovered,
this controversial theory is a doorway to a tangle of secrets
that spawned a legacy of confusion, misinformation, and pain
that still resonates today. The mysteries surrounding McGee's
case live on in this provocative tale of justice in the Deep
South.
Based on exhaustive documentary research--court transcripts,
newspaper reports, archived papers, letters, FBI documents,
and the recollections of family members on both sides--Mississippi
native Alex Heard tells a moving and unforgettable story that
evokes the bitter conflicts between black and white, North and
South, in America" during that era.
Alex Heard is currently the editorial director of Outside
magazine, and now lives with his wife in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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Timeline
1980: Writing and reporting internship at the Nashville
Tennessean.
1980-1981: Editorial intern at the Washington Monthly,
a political magazine in Washington D.C.
1982-1983: Staff writer at Education Week, a weekly newspaper.
1984-1986: Freelance writer for various magazines, including
The New Republic, Harper's, Vanity Fair.
1986-1988: Weekly humor columnist for the Washington Post
Magazine.
1988-1992: Freelance writer for more magazines and papers.
1992-1996: Senior editor and writer at Outside magazine,
based in Chicago and (later) Santa Fe.
1996-1998: Senior editor and writer at the New York Times
Magazine, in New York.
1999-Present: Executive editor at Wired Magazine, San
Francisco, California. 1999-Apocalypse Pretty Soon
published
2010-The Eyes of Willie Magee published
by Harper Collins.
RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE
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A Review of Apocalypse
Pretty Soon
by Wesley Clark (SHS)
Alex Heard's Apocalypse Pretty Soon is a great book.
It is enlightening and
entertaining. This book was very funny. I thouroughly enjoyed
it and would recomend it to anyone.
Apocalypse Pretty Soon explores America's bizarre side.
It even scares you a little when you realize what is actually
happening under your nose. It also makes you wander what else
is happening that we don't know about. This book presented the
information to me and kept me thinking.
Alex Heard traveled around America looking for "weird" groups
of people by today's standards. These "weird" people included
milinial, utopian, and doomsday cults, and even a Pentecostal
dairy farmer from Mississippi who believes his red heifer is
a sign of a new temple being built in Jerusalem. This book opens
your eyes to other people's beliefs and thoughts.
I would recomend this book to anyone. It was great! The book
was funny and kept me going until the end. If you get
a chance, please read this book. It is great, and you will enjoy
it.
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Interview with
Alex Heard (1999)
by Wesley Clark (SHS)
(This interview was conducted via electronic mail in 1999.)
Wesley: What are your major works?
Alex: I have only written one book,
which you know about. From 1980 to the present I've worked in
journalism and I've written a zillion newspaper and magazine
articles.
Wesley: Who is your favorite author?
Alex: I don't have just one, but
I tend to like history in general and funny and/or strange novels.
Some of my favorite writers include:
Walker Percy: I especially like The Moviegoer.
Kingsley Amis: Lucky Jim
Charles Portis: The Dog of the South
Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird
Joseph Mitchell: Up in the Old Hotel
Martin Amis: Money
John Kennedy Toole: A Confederacy of Dunces
Jack Kerouac is another old favorite, though he's more of a
college-age enthusiasm. I liked
On the Road a lot. My two favorite books as a kid were
The Yearling and Huckleberry Finn.
In general, though, a LOT of my reading over the years has
been of oddball books that most people have not heard of. You
can get an idea of what I mean by looking at the notes of Apocalypse
Pretty Soon. I've had to read a lot of "fringe" stuff to
understand the topics I'm writing about. (I've also wanted to
read these books; they're fun.)
Wesley: What author do you think
has influenced you the most?
Alex: Hmmm. I don't know. Stylistically,
I learned a lot from Ron Rosenbaum, a journalist who wrote a
great though not that well-known book of journalism called Oswald's
Ghost. Most of these stories were about strange subcultures,
and I admired the way he delved into them without taking cheap
shots. I wouldn't say he was my "most" influential, though.
I spent a lot of time in college trying to develop my own style.
Wesley: Why did you decide to
write about "End-Times America" as the subject of your book
Apocalypse Pretty Soon?
Alex: I got interested in fringe
subcultures while writing magazine articles in Washington, D.C. Pretty
much by accident, I ran into a millennial subculture called
"Earth Changes," which I devote a chapter to. I realized pretty
quickly that this millennial material was fascinating and funny,
so I started digging around for more.
Wesley: When did you become interested
in writing? Was there something in particular that got
you interested in writing?
Alex: I came very late to writing
and journalism. I was not interested in journalism AT ALL as
a kid, and only started writing seriously during my junior year
at Vanderbilt. I was simply looking for something I could do
with myself: at the time, I was an English major without much
of a plan about what I wanted to do. I was lucky that Vanderbilt
had a good English department and great student publications;
otherwise I wouldn't have gotten involved.
Wesley: How long did it take you
to write Apocalypse Pretty Soon? Where did you get the
idea for this book?
Alex: I worked on the book sporadically
over a period of 10 years. But I only worked on it really hard
-- reporting in the field and writing -- for two years, 1997
and 1998. I was working during this period, and in that last
year, 1998, I worked almost every night and part of most weekends
to get the book written in time.
Wesley: Are you working on a new
book right now? If so do you have a title for it yet? And, what
is it about?
Alex: No plans for a new book yet,
though I'm thinking about trying a novel.
Wesley: Have you received any
awards for your writing?
Alex: None!
Wesley: Do you have any advice
for future writers?
Alex: Read a lot of books and newspapers
and try to travel as much as you can.
Wesley: Do you have any advice
for students today?
Alex: Hang in there.
Wesley: How has Mississippi or
living in Mississippi influenced your writing?
Alex: Mississippians, in general,
have good senses of humor, and I think I "learned how to be funny"
there. My brothers and sister were/are very funny, so I picked
up a lot from them.
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Related
Websites
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Bibliography
Heard, Alex. Apocalypse Pretty Soon: Travels In End-Time
America. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1999
Heard, Alex. Electronic Mail Interview. May 1, 1999.
Heard, Julia. Personal Interview. May 9, 1999.
1999,
2008, 2010
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