Background
Hall, Brian Jonathan was born on August 31, 1959 in Woburn, Massachusetts, United States. Son of Louis Alton and Peggy Wood (Smith) Hall.
(“A tragic portrait . . . presented with sympathy and freq...)
“A tragic portrait . . . presented with sympathy and frequently with humor . . . of a disparate people who were never united except by their resentment of a foreign conqueror.” – Atlantic Monthly In The Impossible Country, Brian Hall relates his encounters with Serbs, Croats, and Muslims— “real people, likeable people” who are now overcome with suspicion and anxiety about one another. Hall takes the standard explanations, the pundits’ predictions, and the evening news footage and inverts our perceptions of the country, its politics, its history, and its seemingly insoluble animosities.
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Hall, Brian Jonathan was born on August 31, 1959 in Woburn, Massachusetts, United States. Son of Louis Alton and Peggy Wood (Smith) Hall.
He attended Harvard University from 1977 to 1981, graduating summa cum laude with an Bachelor of Arts in English Literature.
From 1982 to 1984, Hall bicycled through western and eastern Europe, camping out most of the time. Based on his experiences in Eastern Europe, Hall wrote his first book, Stealing From a Deep Place (published by Hill and Wang, 1988), which was shortlisted for the Thomas Cook Travel Book Award. His first novel, The Dreamers (Harper and Row, 1989), tells the story of an American graduate student studying the Anschluss in Vienna, who gets into a rather tortured affair with an Austrian woman and her young, fatherless son.
Hall’s other novels include The Saskiad (Houghton-Mifflin, 1997).
I Should Be Extremely Happy In Your Company (Viking, 2003). And Fall of Frost (Viking, 2008).
The Saskiad, a coming-of-age novel about a precocious and imaginative young girl, has been translated into 12 languages. I Should Be Extremely Happy In Your Company was named one of the best novels of the year by the Boston Globe, Salon Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, and The Christian Science Monitor.
Fall of Frost was named one of the best novels of the year by the Boston Globe and the Washington Post.
Additional nonfiction works by Hall include: The Impossible Country: A Journey Through the Last Days of Yugoslavia (Godine, 1994) and Madeleine’s World: A Biography of a Three-Year-Old (Houghton-Mifflin, 1997). Foreign The Impossible Country, Hall learned Serbo-Croatian, and traveled several times to Yugoslavia over a three-year period, from 1989-1991. Hall, by watching his own daughter’s development over three years, wrote a book speculating on what the growth of human consciousness might look like from the inside.
He has written for publications such as the New York Times Magazine and The New Yorker, though since 1997, he has dedicated himself exclusively to writing his own books
In addition to being an author, he is also an amateur pianist and cellist.
(“A tragic portrait . . . presented with sympathy and freq...)
(Book by Hall, Brian)
Married Pamela Ann Moss, September 26, 1986. Children: Madeleine Carolina Moss, Cora Graydon Moss.