Memoirs
Praise written for an individual following death often takes one of three forms: obituaries, tributes, and memoirs. Memoirs generally reflect or focus on shared time or experiences with their subject.
Many memoirs were written by friends and admirers of Richard Brautigan following his death in 1984. Some are more factual than others, but all speak to how Brautigan, his life, his writings, and his place in American literature are remembered.
This part of
Brautigan Bibliography and Archive provides information about memoirs written of Richard Brautigan, as well as links to related information or resources.
Abbott, Keith. "In the Riffles with Richard: A Profile of Richard Brautigan." California Fly Fisher March/April 1998: 44-45, 47, 69.
Published in San Francisco, California. Edited by Richard Anderson. Profiles Brautigan from a fishing perspective. Uses material from Abbott's well-known
Downstream from Trout Fishing in America and new memoirs.
READ the full text of this memoir.
—. "August Dream of Richard Brautigan 1985." Poetry Flash (193) 1989: 17.
A short memoir of an evening with Brautigan at a cafe. The full text of this memoir reads:
Richard and I were at a seaside outdoor cafe. Everything was painted white, the walls, the sidewalks and the poles holding up a yellow awning over us. He was poor, as if at the very end of his life, cadging drinks and food. After I ordered him some hot dogs, we stood at the lunch counter in the shade by a brilliant green lawn, waiting for a seaman's white mess jacket to be delivered. Richard was going on a cruise, and it was clear from his comments that this cruise was simply a metaphor for his passage through death.
When the mess jacket arrived, Richard put it on and instantly looked like a different, much younger person even though he remained his old self, quarrelsome, vain and proud. He was very sad, too, claiming the coat wasn't right. But once he had undergone the change, he couldn't go back. He began to bicker about the hot dogs—they weren't, he implied, up to his status. There was no way to tell him that he was no longer a famous writer, but a mess orderly.
A young woman came by and took me on the lawn. Once we were in the sun, her skin seemed radiant, supple and beautiful. We stood looking at Richard on a bar stool, dissatisfied, unhappy and fretful. When I made a move to go back to him, the woman brushed a finger ever so lightly on my arm, holding me back easily with a paralyzing, almost magnetic touch. I knew then she was my muse and she had other things for me to do.
Reprinted
Kumquat Meringue (1) April 1991: n. pg.
The literary magazine
Kumquat Meringue is dedicated to the memory of Richard Brautigan.
—. "Going around with Richard Brautigan." San Francisco Chronicle. 26 March 1989: This World section: 12.
—. Downstream From Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan. Santa Barbara, CA: Capra Press, 1989.
ISBN 0-884-96293-8 (hard cover); 0-884-96304-7 (paperback)
A memoir of experiences shared with Brautigan in San Francisco and Montana from 1966-1984. Also includes interesting anecdotes and insights into Brautigan's life and works. Concludes with commentary on Brautigan's writing and his place in American literature.
[Brautigan's] writing has been relegated to the shadowland of popular flashes, the peculiar American graveyard of overnight sensations. When a writer dies, appreciation of his work seldom reverses field, but continues in the direction that it was headed at the moment of death, and this has been true for Brautigan. Even during Brautigan's bestseller years in the United States, critical studies of his work were few. Those there were never exerted a strong influence on the chiefs of the American critical establishment. (147)
Feedback from Keith Abbott
I've just done a partial tour of the Brautigan Bibliography and Archive and I am pleasantly surprised by the things I did not know. My congratulations on the website. It really is a marvel.
Second Edition
Downstream from Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan
Astrophil Press. 2009.
ISBN 978-0-9822252-2-6 (paperback)
Features much updated material, a new final chapter reflecting on Brautigan's legacy, and previously unpublished photographs by Erik Weber of Brautigan.
Online Resource
An article about this book at the Astrophil Press website.
Limited Edition
Downstream from Trout Fishing in America: A Brief Extract
Coventry, UK: Satori Books. 1998.
Limited Edition: 200 copies.
"A brief extract" from the original edition.
French
Brautigan, un rêveur à Babylone. Paris: 10-18, 1993.
189 pages
ISBN 2-264-01918-2
First printing September 1993.
Paperback, with printed wrappers. Front cover photograph by Louis Monier.
Brautigan, un rêveur à Babylone. Trans. Nicolas Richard. Paris, L'Incertain, 1991.
Paperback, with printed wrappers.
Holt, Patricia. "A Friend's Fond Memoirs of Richard Brautigan."
San Francisco Chronicle 21 March 1989: E5.
As witness to the best and worst of Richard Brautigan, and of the Haight Ashbury in the late 1060s, Abbott offers a number of fresh insights on the dynamics of fame and art as seen through the lens of hippie culture.
As Abbott watches his friend slowly crack up in Bolinas and Montana, he tries to make a literary hero out of Brautigan, which is not a good idea. Yet these rare, behind-the-scenes glimpses of a truly original writer are worth the price of the book. (E5)
Ketchum, Diane. "Counterculture Classic: Richard Brautigan, A Whimsical Muse of Spirit of the '60s."
The Tribune [Oakland, California] 5 April 1989: D1, D2.
Reviews Abbott's
Downstream from Trout Fishing in America and Brautigan's collection of
Trout Fishing in America, The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster, and In Watermelon Sugar. Calls Abbott's memoir "the first biography of Brautigan" (D1).
READ the full text of this review.
Moore, Steven. "Downstream from Trout Fishing in America. A Memoir of Richard Brautigan."
Review of Contemporary Fiction 9(3) Fall 1988: 228.
Says Abbott's book "makes no pretense to being a definitive biography, but it is clearly the best account of Brautigan's life now available." The full text of this review reads:
The shock of hearing of Brautigan's suicide in 1984 was followed by disappointment for many in the months that followed as details of his messy, neurotic life emerged in articles in Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone. A close friend of Brautigan's since 1966, novelist Keith Abbott was as shocked as anyone at his suicide; but annoyed at the media's emphasis on the sordid elements of his life (and the continued critical neglect of Brautigan's work), Abbott set out to write a memoir that would give a more balanced account of both the life and work. He has succeeded admirably, producing a very readable account that doesn't shirk the sordid details but instead puts them into the context of Brautigan's complicated personality. This is balanced by giving equal time to Brautigan's generosity and endearing eccentricity, along with a solid appreciation of the craftsmanship beneath Brautigan's seemingly inconsequential prose. Brautigan was at his best—as a person and as a writer—before fame changed his life in the late sixties, making the first half of Abbott's memoir more enjoyable than the second half. Quite wisely, he withholds details of Brautigan's ghastly childhood (abuse at the hands of a series of stepfathers, grinding poverty, abandonment by his mother on several occasions) until the second half, thereby providing a context for Brautigan's growing pyschological problems in the late seventies. Abbott saves his literary criticism for the concluding chapter, a close reading of passages from the early works that shows how carefully Brautigan crafted his prose.
Abbott's book makes no pretense to being a definitive biography, but it is clearly the best account of Brautigan's life now available, and given its insight and empathy (even the cover pays homage to Brautigan's early photographic covers), this memoir will remain invaluable for all of us who fell under the spell of Brautigan's inimitable books. (228)
Salas, Floyd. "Downstream from Trout Fishing in America. A Memoir of Richard Brautigan."
Western American Literature 24(3) November 1989: 287-288.
Reviews Keith Abbott's study of Brautigan calling it,
a moving book about an extraordinary guy whose fame became his cross. . . . an important book for a young writer to read for its lessons about the pitfalls of fame.
READ the full text of this review.
Streitfeld, David. "Hippie Poet Laureate."
Washington Post Book World 9 April 1989: 15.
Calls Abbott's book "a heartfelt if uneven memoir." Notes a "distant and discontinuous feeling" to Abbott's recollections. Says Abbott is "more helpful on the heady years of fame. Then reviews Brautigan's works. Concludes by saying,
The best of Brautigan will survive, even if the man himself doesn't seem like one you'd care to bring home with you. Or find waiting for you. Once, he was waiting in a friend's house for the guy to return, and started drinking with a third friend. To pass the time, Abbott recounts, "Richard and his partner emptied the friend's refrigerator and painted the kitchen wall with mustard, mayonnaise and jam."
READ the full text of this review.
Tytell, John. "An Elongated Mark Twain."
American Book Review 12(5) November-December 1990: 15.
More a biography of Brautigan than a review of Abbott's memoir. Recounts highlights of Brautigan's life. Says, of Abbott's book,
Abbott isn't really interested in writing criticism so much as in remembering a friend who seems to have been forgotten as quickly as he was once celebrated. (15)
READ the full text of this review.
—. "Brautigan in Bolinas." Exquisite Corpse 4(1) January-February 1986: 12-13.
READ the full text of this memoir.
—. "When Fame Puts Its Feathery Crowbar under Your Rock."
California Magazine April 1985: 90-94, 102-108, 126.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Reprinted
The Best of California: Some People, Places and Insitutions of the Most Exciting State in the Nation as featured in California magazine, 1976-1986. Santa Barbara: Capra Press. 1986. 176-186.
—. "Garfish, Chili Dogs, and the Human Torch: Memories of Richard Brautigan and San Francisco, 1966."
Review of Contemporary Fiction 3(3) Fall 1983: 214-219.
First publication for material that later appeared in
Downstream From Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan. Contends that "there is only one way to become well-known in America as a writer. That is to have your work represent something sociological. . . . Brautigan's work was said to represent the [sociological] chaos [in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district in 1968]." Says Brautigan was catapulted to fame by the efforts of the media to find a writer who represented, through style and subject, the developing hippie philosophy.
READ the full text of this memoir.
—. Skin and Bone. Berkeley: Tangram, 1993.
Pamphlet, 8 pages, sewn into wrappers. Limited to 150 copies. A reminiscence about an experience with Richard Brautigan and Tom McGuane in Montana. Tangram Press is run by Jerry Reddan, a printer for
Andrew Hoyem.
Online Resource
"Keith Abbott: Brilliant Naropa Writing Teacher; Writer; Calligrapher" at
Elephant Journal
"12 or 29 Questions: with Keith Kumasen Abbott interview by Rob McLennan
Allen, Beverly. My Days with Richard. Berkeley, CA: Serendipity Books, 2002.
28 pages, 9.5" x 12.5"
Published by Peter Howard at Serendipity Press.
Printed by Alastair Johnston, Poltroon Press, Berkeley, California.
200 copies printed in three versions: 170 copies in red wrappers, 15 copies in purple wrappers, and 15 copies in yellow wrappers.
Copies of the purple wrapper version are number 1-15 and signed by Peter Howard, the publisher. Copies of the yellow wrapper version are lettered I-VX and signed and corrected by Allen, signed by Alastair Johnston, the printer, and signed by Howard, the publisher.
A short memoir about the author's relationship with Richard Brautigan. They met in San Francisco, December 1969, just prior to publication of
Rommel Drives On Deep into Egypt. Allen posed for the front cover photograph. Includes transcripts of letters she wrote to Brautigan and three photographs of Allen by
Edmund Shea, including the one used as the cover for
Rommel Drives On Deep into Egypt.
Aste, Virginia. "'Freedom?' Richard Brautigan's First Wife, Virginia Aste, Speaks in a New Interview."
Arthur Magazine 25 December 2009.
Interview by Susan Kay Anderson
Published at
Arthur magazine website
Aste recalls meeting Brautigan, the 1961 Idaho camping trip during which he wrote
Trout Fishing in America, and about how Brautigan's drinking led to their separation. Along the way she provides interesting background details regarding the 1960s in San Francisco, and her life with Brautigan.
Introduction by Mike Daily who also interviewed Greg Keeler about his book
Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan.
READ the full text of this interviewview.
Online Resource
Aste's interview at the Arthur magazine website
Brautigan, Ianthe. You Can't Catch Death: A Daughter's Memoir. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2000.
176 pages; ISBN 0-312-25296-X; First printing May 2000
A memoir by Brautigan's daughter,
Ianthe, about coming to grips with her father's death and memory.
The front cover photograph by Michael Abramson shows Ianthe and Brautigan sitting in front of the barn at his Pine Creek, Montana ranch, in 1980. The window of his writing room is visible at the top of the barn. A similiar photograph, taken at the same time, appeared in
James Seymore's eulogy to Brautigan.
Proof Copy

Proof copy combined in a shrink-wrapped slipcase with Brautigan's
An Unfortunate Woman, May 2000.
Slipcase edition

New York: St. Martins Press, 2000
Combined in a slipcase with Brautigan's
An Unfortunate Woman and sold as a set.
Griffin paperback edition

New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2001
240 pages; ISBN 0-312-26418-6; First printing July 2001
Paperback,with printed wrappers.
Canongate edition

London: Canongate Books Ltd., 2001
224 pages; ISBN 1-841-95147-1; First printing Sept. 17, 2001
Paperback, with printed wrappers.
Rebel edition

Edinburgh, Scotland: Rebel, 2000
224 pages; ISBN 1-841-95025-4; First printing July 1, 2000
Hard cover, with dust jacket.
Anders, Smiley. "Tragedy Prevades Brautigan's Books."
Sunday Advocate [Baton Rouge, LA] June 11, 2000
Sunday Advocate Magazine: 12, 13.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death.
READ the full text of this review.
Anonymous. "Fishing for Truth: Brautigan's Only Child Confronts the Author's Death by Writing about His Life."
People Weekly 53(23) 12 June 2000: 73.
READ the full text of this review.
—. "Books by the Bay."
The San Francisco Chronicle 14 July, 2000: C11.
Notes that Ianthe Brautigan will give a reading the following day, 11:00 am, at San Francisco's free outdoor book fair at Pier 32.
—. "Books by the Bay."
The San Francisco Chronicle 9 July, 2000: 9.
Notes that Ianthe Brautigan will give a reading Saturday, July 15, 11:00 am, at San Francisco's free outdoor book fair at Pier 32. Says she will sign copies of her book
You Can't Catch Death following the reading.
—. "Literary Guide."
San Francisco Chronicle 6 January 2002: 5.
Notes that Ianthe will appear the following Thursday at 7:30 p.m., Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera, (415) 927-0960, to discuss her book.
—. "Books."
Scotland on Sunday [Edinburgh, Scotland] 23 July 2000: 10.
Notes a reading by Ianthe Brautigan saying she "was warm, although her American tones may have been more resonant in a coffee house environment."
—. "You Can't Catch Death."
Publishers Weekly 247(20) 15 May 2000: 101.
Richard Brautigan (1937-1984) made a big splash with Trout Fishing in America (1967), whose unbuttoned prose found a ready-made audience in the burgeoning counterculture. Brautigan completed 11 more books of fiction and nine of poetry before he took his own life; he is now remembered as a campus favorite, and a notorious drinker. His daughter Ianthe aims to supplant that portrait with a more complex and tender view; her raw, affecting and largely admiring memoir recalls "R.B." as a father and as a writer. Rather than follow his life, or her own, from the late '60s to the early '80s, Ianthe breaks her book up into short sections—some narrative, some meditative, some impressionistic—in a manner mildly reminiscent of Trout Fishing itself. In one three-page segment, the adult Ianthe tells her own daughter about Richard's suicide. In the next two pages, Ianthe recalls the bike she got for her ninth birthday. The piece after that (one paragraph) is purely lyrical: "Sometimes the love I have for my father overtakes my whole being . . ." (A series of single paragraphs, scattered throughout, describe Ianthe's dreams.) The elder Brautigan comes off as energetic, affectionate, playful, outrageous and needy—increasingly so as the '70s wore on. His death and Ianthe's progressive reactions to it dominate much of the book. Ianthe's memoir creates a vivid sense of her continuing loss and shows how she has come to terms with it. Her work should please "R.B."'s still-ardent fans, who will seek (and find) facts about a father, and leave with a new, moving knowledge of his daughter.
Bradfield, Scott. "California: It's A Jungle Out There; Books."
The Times [London, England] 21 June 2000: 12.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death and . Says Ianthe's book is a "memoir of coming to terms with her father's suicide."
READ the full text of this review.
Bourgea, Yosha. "Gone Fishing: Writer Ianthe Brautigan Comes to Terms with Her Famous Father's Legacy."
Sonoma County Independent September 14-20, 2000: ***?***.
Reviews both
You Can't Catch Death by
Ianthe Brautigan and
An Unfortunate Woman. Says, of
You Can't Catch Death,
It is a haunting, perceptive portrait of a man whose great talent as a writer was shadowed by alcoholism and the ghosts of his past.
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Bourgea's review at the Sonoma County Independent website
Carlson, Michael. "An American Original Way Out of Style: Michael Carlson on the Literary Legacy of a Psychedelic Hero."
The Financial Times 12 August 2000: 4.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death. Says
You Can't Catch Death is an
interesting, but not revealing, memoir. . . . Ianthe writes awkwardly, as imprecise as her father was exact. She is often distracted by minutiae, and comes alive only when she focuses on her father's life: she writes best about her father's childhood. (4)
Concludes by saying,
These books are not the best place to begin an acquaintance with Richard Brautigan's work, but read in concert they are a moving reminder for anyone who remembers the joys of discovering the strangely skewed vision of a most misunderstood American original. It's time for a new generation to make that discovery. (4)
READ the full text of this review.
Cooper, Neil. "Innocents Enraged."
Sunday Herald [Edinburgh, Scotland] 23 July 2000: 10.
Notes a reading by
Ianthe Brautigan, the daughter of novelist Richard Brautigan, who committed suicide 12 years ago. Brautigan reads movingly from her memoir, You Can't Catch Death, before selecting an excerpt from her father's final, soon-to-be published work.
Dixon, Katrina. "Paperbacks."
The Scotsman [Edinburgh, Scotland] 13 October 2001: 10.
For a long time Ianthe Brautigan thought she could catch death. As the daughter of cult 1960s writer Richard Brautigan she had to contend with her father's self-destructive drinking and suicidal tendencies from an early age, and then deal with his actual suicide when she was 25. But her memoirs, written in a similar, almost naive, open, poetic-prose style to that of her father's whimsical but surreally death-filled books, celebrates her life with him as much as it attempts to come to terms with his difficulties with living. Warm-hearted and well-paced, Ianthe's memories are a tribute to her father and to her own talent.
Duffy, Dennis. "A Daughter's Fitting Rescue."
National Post 203(2) 17 June 2000: E13.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman by Brautigan and
You Can't Catch Death.
Says, of
You Can't Catch Death
Alcoholics leave their children twice: When they move into the slow suicide the bottle offers, and when they make it to the big lonely they've been lurching toward. They turn their children first into parents, and then into searchers. Ianthe Brautigan's memoir replicates that search for the absent dad, making for a wrenching read.
Swamps of sentimentality and self-pity lurk in material like this. Ianthe Brautigan passes them by, focusing instead on yearning for a union lost almost as soon as it began. Of course she quotes Faulkner, so lucid on the past's inescapability, so mired in booze himself. Ianthe succeeds finally in meeting the grandmother whose identity and memory her father sternly concealed. She makes it into no great climax, however, but simply another way-station on a journey never quite to be completed.
READ the full text of this review.
Ford, Rory. "Injustice For All As Jailhouse Is Rocked."
Evening News [Edinburgh, Scotland] 18 July 2000: 22.
Ianthe Brautigan read from her autobiographical memoir, You Can't Catch Death, about her relationship with her father, cult writer Richard Brautigan.
There was a very real danger that Brautigan's issues with her deceased father, who took his own life, would seem unimportant when compared with the here and now of people languishing in jail [the subject of the first half of the evening]. Fortunately she is such a lucid and honest writer that this was not a concern.
Gard, Andrew. "Drama of Doomed Author Redeems Pedestrian Writing."
The Plain Dealer 16 July 2000: 12.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death saying
neither has much to offer. . . . [But both] draw their strength from the circumstances under which they were created. Neither is particularly well written, neither contains any real insight. But within each lies the tragic drama of a doomed man, and it is this that redeems them both.
Says
You Can't Catch Death is
loosely written, with only a semblance of structure or organization, it is a collection of memories, dreams and vignettes from both the past and present. Again, it is only the aura of tragedy and the reader's sympathy for the author that hold the book together.
Ianthe remembers her father as two different people, one playful and doting, the other depressed and usually drunk. . . . Much of "You Can't Catch Death" deals with Ianthe's attempt to reconcile these two personalities into a single man, and in so doing to understand his suicide. (12)
READ the full text of this review.
Gumbell, Andrew. "Trip of a Lifetime with the Ghost of a Dead Father; Richard Brautigan's Books —Once Described as 'Mark Twain on Acid'—Were Cult Classics for the Hippie generation. Then in the Eighties, Overwhelmed by Alcohol Abuse and Disillusionment, He Put a Gun To His Head and Shot Himself. Now His Daughter Has Written a Memoir of the Man who Haunts Her Life."
The Independent Sunday [London, England] 16 July 2000: 1.
READ this review.
Hall, Simon. "Ghost Laid to Rest."
The Herald [Glasgow, Scotland] 20 July 2000: 22.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death.
Says, of
You Can't Catch Death
Ianthe has emerged from the debris of her father's suicide to write a memoir which charts the writer's life and her own subsequent journey towards healing. Her stated wish is to ''break the silence and navigate suicide''. What emerges is a frank and compelling narrative of great integrity which details fascinatingly the minutiae of her father's life. . . . No details are spared in this account, which, on balance, remains remarkably positive. There is absolutely no self-indulgence in You Can't Catch Death, only a desire to lay Richard Brautigan's ghost to rest with dignity. (22)
READ the full text of this review.
Hamlin, Andrew. "Two New Books Explore the Enigma of Brautigan."
The Seattle Times 23 July 2000: L8.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death. Says,
Brautigan's daughter wraps [the tropes that marked Brautigan's work] around her like a favorite Sunday sweater as she charts the vortexes in her father's life, and the one he created in hers. . . . If Ianthe learned to mourn her father as a lost son, perhaps her father mourns, through the unfortunate woman, the mother he ran away from, the grandmother Ianthe eventually finds. (L8)
READ the full text of this review.
Harrington, Michael. "'An Unfortunate Woman: A Journey'; 'You Can't Catch Death: A Daughter's Memoir'."
The Philadelphia Inquirer 31 August 2000: **?**.
Originally syndicated
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service 30 August 2000: K2502
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death.
You Can't Catch Death, Ianthe Brautigan's earnest, harrowing memoir of her father, is mostly valuable for its details of his life.
READ the full text of this review.
Reprinted
"Remembering the Troubled Man behind Richard Brautigan Craze."
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 13 September 2000: CUE Section, 03E.
Edits and retitles 12 September 2000 review in
Chicago Tribune.
READ the full text of this review.
"Autobiography Could Lead To Revisiting Brautigan's Work."
Chicago Tribune 12 September 2000: Section 5, 3.
Edits and retitles original 30 August 2000 review in
The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Jackson, Mick. "Books: Eternal Hippy: Mick Jackson on Richard Brautigan: An Unfortunate Woman, You Can't Catch Death by Ianthe Brautigan."
The Guardian [Manchester, England] 5 August 2000: Saturday section, 8.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death.
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Jackson's review at the The Guardian website
Johnson, Dennis. "Johnson: The Avant-Gardist's Daughter."
Online Athens 22 July 2000: Online http://www.onlineathens.com/stories/072300/ath_0723000012.shtml
Interviews Ianthe regarding her book
You Can't Catch Death. Mentions Brautigan's
An Unfortunate Woman. Ianthe said she hoped her book would work in tandem with her father's. ''The cool thing about Richard Brautigan is he just did what he did. He was never pontificating. He went his own way for a long time, and that gives me courage.''
Online Resource
Johnson's review at the Online Athens website
Keefer, Bob. "Doubt Fishing in America: Beat Author's Daughter on A Quest To Understand Richard Brautigan's Death."
The Register-Guard 28 May 200: 5G, 6G.
An article about Ianthe visiting Eugene, Oregon, "looking for ghosts" and promoting her book.
READ the full text of this review.
Kippen, David. "Quoth the Traven: More Musings on Mysterious Writer."
San Francisco Chronicle 21 September 2002: D4.
Notes that Ianthe Brautigan will appear at the Third Annual Sonoma County Book Fair on this date, ostensibly to promote her book.
Marshall, John. "New on the Bookshelves for Brautigan Fans."
Seattle Post-Intelligencer 19 May 2000: 28.
READ this review.
Online Resource
Marshall's review at the Seattle-Post Intelligencer Reporter website
Marshall, John.[?] "Readings and Signings."
Seattle Post-Intelligencer 19 May 2000: 28.
The daughter of writer Richard Brautigan, Ianthe Brautigan reads from her memoir, "You Can't Catch Death," and also from her father's newly discovered last novel, "An Unfortunate Woman," 5 p.m., The Elliott Bay Book Co., 101 S. Main St. 206-624-6600.
—. "Readings and Signings."
Seattle Post-Intelligencer 12 May 2000: 26.
Notes that Ianthe Brautigan will read the following Thursday.
Brautigan is the daughter of local writer Richard Brautigan, who committed suicide in 1984. She reads from her memoir, "You Can't Catch Death," and also from her father's newly discovered last novel, "An Unfortunate Woman," 7 p.m., University Book Store, 4326 University Way N.E. 206-634-3400.
McAllister, Carol A. "You Can't Catch Death: A Daughter's Memoir."
Library Journal 125(12) July 2000: 90.
The full text of this review reads
[Ianthe] Brautigan's father, Richard Brautigan, was a popular, controversial West Coast writer whose offbeat novels and poems appealed to the young, countercultural activists of the late Sixties and early Seventies. An alcoholic, he committed suicide in 1984 adt the age of 49. His daughter, an only child, who was 24 at the time, was overwhelmed with guilt. In this memoir, she examines her conflicting feelings about her much loved but difficult father and the impact his death had on her life. Her intimate account is honest and bittersweet, filled with details of her father's small kindnesses mingled with the grief and helplessness she often felt when he was too drunk to care for her. Brautigan's book is a tribute to a gifted, troubled parent and a moving narrative of the healing process of a suicide survivor. Recommneded for both public and academic libraries.
Parkenham, Michael. "Recalling Richard Brautigan through a Daughter's Pain."
Baltimore Sun 23 April 2000: 11F.
Ianthe Brautigan, has come forward with a book about her father—or, more truly, about her own long agonies and too-occasional joys.
Pohl, R. D. "Brautigan's Last Book, Daughter's Memoir Cast Light on a Dark Subject."
The Buffalo News 1 October 2000: F7.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death. Calls
You Can't Catch Death
a young woman's memoir about her own grief and what went on inside herself while she dealt with the mysteries of her father's life and suicide. . . . [The reader is left with the conclusion that] in the absence of other stabilizing forces in his life, Brautigan came to see Ianthe as his lifeline and connection to some semblance of family life. (F7)
READ the full text of this review.
Reynolds, Susan Salter. "Discoveries: You Can't Catch Death."
Los Angeles Times 4 June 2000: L11.
The full text of this review reads:
Named for a mountain violet in a poem by Shelley, Ianthe was 24 when her father, Richard Brautigan (author of 11 novels, most famously, "Trout Fishing in America," nine books of poetry and one collection of short stories), shot himself at 49. Ianthe had lived through decades of his drinking and several instances when he treatened to kill himself. She had begged him not to; she had been, sometimes, his proclaimed reason for living. In spite of his sketchy fathering, she loved him like the daughter of a king: his physical grace, his unusual appearance, his humor, his power. Brautigan and his wife divorced when she was 3 and Ianthe was raised by her father; in his Geary Street apartment in San Francisco, in Bolinas and finally on his Montana rance, where drinking took over his life. To his daughter, he claimed his binges were the only way to clear his mind of cobwebs. Ianthe never figures out why her father killed himself; "You Can't Catch Death" is not a book of answers. You feel you've lost a son, a canny therapist tells her, and now, finally, he is safe.
Also reviews separately
An Unfortunate Woman.

Ring, Kevin. "Richard Brautigan."
Beat Scene 37: 16-18.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death. Of
You Can't Catch Death, Ring says Ianthe Brautigan
writes like her father, passages are succinct, cryptic even, it is a book as much about herself as it is about this cult American writer who happens to be her father, she confesses to concealing who her father was to avoid the inevitable questions—questions that will stir up the unease she feels about her past.
Concludes with a short interview with Ianthe, conducted during her book promotional tour of the United Kingdom.
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Beat Scene magazine website
Seaman, Donna. "When the Trout Stream Runs Dry."
The Booklist 96(19/20) 1-15 June 2000: 1835.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death. A publication notice appears on page 1852 and refers readers to "boxed review on p. 1835."
READ the full text of this review.
Snyder, George. "Hot Dates/North Bay."
San Francisco Chronicle 15 September 2001: 1.
Notes that Ianthe Brautigan will appear at the inaugural Sonoma County Book Fair the following weekend.
Terrill, Mark. "Beat Bios."
Rain Taxi Winter 2000/2001. Online Edition.
Reviews four new books about Jack Kerouac, Charles Bukowski, Paul Bowles, and Richard Brautigan. Says
Disparate as their visions and methods may have been, all left their unique and indelible signatures on the post-WWII literary landscape through a series of highly influential works. [Ianthe Brautigan's memoir is a] highly personal and subjective portrait, which was obviously a necessary and cathartic step in the process of coming to terms with her father's suicide. . . . Ianthe Brautigan's warm and at times moving memoir is a compelling read, but really only whets the appetite. In terms of altering the face of American literature, Brautigan is absolutely and unquestioningly on equal footing with Kerouac, Bukowski and Bowles, and is worthy of the same critical assessment. The fact that his work may not have received the same recognition and critical acclaim as these other writers probably lies in the fact that his work actually had more in common with postmodernism than with the Beats or the flower-power culture of the sixties. It's only a matter of time until Brautigan's recognition as a true genius is finally realized.
Online Resource
Terrill's review at the Rain Taxi website
Uschuk, J. "St. Martin's Offers Two Perspectives On The Late Richard Brautigan: His and Hers."
Tucson Weekly 22-28 June 2000: 28.
Reviews both
An Unfortunate Woman and
You Can't Catch Death. Says, of
You Can't Catch Death, "Ianthe Brautigan's straightforward writing style creates a work without self-pity that deftly substantiates her pain."
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Uschuk's review at the Tucson Weekly website
Ianthe Brautigan was interviewed by Dan Brodnitz 31 March 2008 ("An Interview with Ianthe Brautigan") for his
Cecil Vortex website.
The focus of this interview was Ianthe's approach to the creative process, working on her memoir
You Can't Catch Death, and some memories of her father and his thoughs on the creative life.
Online Resource
"An Interview with Ianthe Brautigan" at the Cecil Vortex website
Bishoff, Don. "Author's Life Was Shaped in Eugene."
The Register-Guard 25 August 1993: 1B, 2B.
An article about author
William R. Hjortsberg's trip to Eugene, Oregon, researching information about Brautigan's early life there for a forthcoming biography.
READ the full text of this article.
Blei, Norbert. "In Memoriam: Richard Brautigan." Milwaukee Journal 11 November 1984: E9.
". . . [H]e was a writer in his time who attracted considerable attention. [H]e was our [Guillaume] Appolinaire ([Charles] Baudelaire, [Arthur] Rimbaud) and then some. [e.e.] Cummings' whimsy. [William] Saroyan's mustache. The shadow of [Maxwell] Bodenheim. Variations on [Kurt] Vonnegut. He was all your eggs in one basket. . . .Wizard of weird metaphor. Savant of smiling similes. . . .You won't rest in peace, Richard. Promise?
READ the full text of this article.
Online Resource
Blei's memoir and other thoughts at the Bashõ's Road website
Bond, Peggy Lucas. "Richard Brautigan 1935-1984." St. Petersburg Times 2 June 1985: 7D.
Speaks of personal connections to Brautigan's works, as well as the author himself. Provides a nice overview of Brautigan's time in Montana. Concludes by saying,
Maybe his death can be best explained in his own words:
When dreams wake
Life ends.
Then dreams are gone.
Life ends.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Brissie, Carol. "Memories of Rich." Christian Science Monitor 1 February 1985, Sec. B: 2.
Recalls experiences shared with Brautigan. Says Brautigan "resembled his writing: often gentle and beautiful, sometimes harsh, usually whimsical, and always imaginative. . . . And that's how I shall remember Richard."
READ the full text of this memoir.
Brissie worked with Helen Brann, Brautigan's literary agent, in New York.
Caen, Herb. "What Goes On." San Francisco Chronicle 30 October 1984: 21.
The full text of this memoir reads:
Another footnote to a headline: It now develops that poet-novelist Richard Brautigan killed himself with a Smith & Wesson .44 magnum he borrowed last March—not for that purpose—from Jimmy Sakata, owner of the Cho-Cho Japanese restaurant on Kearny, for years a favorite Brautigan hangout. "He said he liked to have a gun around," recalls Jimmy, "and would return it in a few months. Last time I saw him, about a month ago, he said he wouldn't be around for awhile. 'too much work to do.' He was in such a turmoil—the divorce, the publishing problems. I guess now I'll get my gun back."
Caen, Herb. "Here Today." San Francisco Chronicle 29 October 1984: 17.
The full text of this memoir reads:
Richard Brautigan, the late novelist-poet, was a man of delightful whimsy. The first time I met him, he was standing at a Powell St. cable car stop, handing out seed packets on which he had written poems, a different one on each packet. "Here," he'd say, handing one to a bemused passenger, "please plant this book." . . . Over the weekend, he was still very much a topic in the local literary world. There appears little doubt now that he shot himself—his long-dead body was found Thurs. in his Bolinas home—but whether he was depressed or drunk or both was a subject of long conjecture among his peers. "Richard's problem," said one writer, "was that his readers grew up but he didn't." "A guy who drinks that much shouldn't keep a gun around the house," said another. "Nobody should keep a gun around the house. Many's the night I was drunk and depressed enough to shoot myself." . . . "Last time I ran into him at Enrico's," said a third, "he was way down because nobody wanted to publish him anymore," which brings up an irony. His N. Y. agent, not having heard from Richard for an alarmingly long time, hired the S. F. private eye who found Brautigan dead. The agent had news that might have saved Brautigan's life: an offer of a two-book contract.
Don Carpenter often said he considered Richard Brautigan his best friend. This poignant memoir recounts their first meeting and several shared experiences.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Online Resource
Carpenter's memoir at the Don Carpenter website
Chappel, Steve. "Brautigan in Montana." San Francisco Chronicle Review 2 November 1980: 4-5.
Recounts fishing with Brautigan on the Yellowstone River, in Montana, and an evening drinking and talking in Brautigan's kitchen. Features several interesting quotes from Brautigan regarding his life and writing.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Chatham, Russell. "Dust to Dust."
Dark Waters. Livingston, MT: Clark City Press, 1988. 28-34.
A book of essays detailing fishing, drinking, and eating experiences enjoyed by Chatham and his friends, including Brautigan. Chatham builds a discussion of guns, hunting, and machismo around memories of Brautigan in relation to these topics. He says Brautigan did not hunt, and was not macho but fragile and sensitive.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Excerpted
"Dust to Dust."
Bolinas Hearsay News Circa 2000.
Chronicle Staff, The and the Associated Press. "Brautigan Dead: Poet-Author Who Had Ranch Near Livingston Found in Calif. Home." Bozeman Daily Chronicle 26 October 1984: 1, 2.
Incorporates Associated Press material and quotes from Bozeman residents who knew Brautigan.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Reprinted
"Poet-Writer Brautigan Found Dead in Home."
Bozeman Daily Chronicle Extra 31 October 1984: 6.
Omits last eight paragraphs of original.
Condon, Garret. "Locals Remember Brautigan in '60s." Hartford Courant 3 November 1984: D1, D8.
Three Hartford residents remember Brautigan.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Cook, Stephen. "A Weekend of Memories of Brautigan."
San Francisco Examiner & Chronicle 28 October 1984: A1, A24.
Written two days after Brautigan's death was first announced, this article quotes extensively from interviews with Tom McGuane, Becky Fonda, Curt Gentry, and
Don Carpenter, all of whom note Brautigan's talents as a writer, and troubled last days. They agree that Brautigan was undone by lost fame. The last they saw of Brautigan was 13 Sept. 1984, in Gino and Carlos, a North Beach bar.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Delattre, Pierre. "Brautigan Done For."
Episodes. St. Paul, MN: Graywolf Press, 1993. 53-54.
A distilled memoir of Brautigan.
Delattre remembers Brautigan's fishing talents, his ability to "get drunk on anything," his inspiration to write
Trout Fishing in America from immediate experience rather than memory of the past, and his comments about writing.
The full text of this memoir reads:
I never knew as great a fisherman as Richard. One time we parked
along a little stream. I opened the back for the station wagon and
got to work preparing my gear. By the time I had finished selecting
a fly and tying it on, Richard was already trudging back with his
limit in the creel. He gave half to me and we waded upstream until
we came to an encampment of picnickers. A mother and three kids were
splashing in the water. Brautigan bet me he could cast his fly right
into the middle of those people and pull out a trout. He did, and so
deftly they didn't even notice. Brautigan had another talent. He
could get drunk on anything. In our tent that night, he got drunk on
water. He began to lament about his trout fishing book. He just
couldn't get the magic down on paper. He read me some of the stories
and asked for a frank opinion. "Boring", I confessed. Then one
afternoon back in North Beach we went into a hardware store so that
he could buy some chicken wire for his bird cage. Suddenly he seized
the pen from my pocket, the notebook from my shoulder bag, ran out
and over to a park bench, and started to scribble a story about a man
who finds a used trout stream in the back of a hardware store. The
next day, we stopped to chat with a legless-armless man on a
rollerboard who sold pencils. Brautigan called him "Trout Fishing in
America Shorty" and wrote a story about him. From then on, trout
fishing ceased to be a memory of the past, but the theme of immediate
experience and Brautigan's book made him a rich and famous writer. He
didn't handle this well and finally blew his brains out while working
on a novel in his Bolinas cabin. I don't know what was bothering
him, but here's a possible clue: The last time I saw him, we were
walking past the middle room of his house. There was a table in
there with a typewriter on it. "Quiet", he whispered, pushing me
ahead of him into the kitchen. "My new novel's in there. I kind of
stroll in occasionally, write a few quick paragraphs, and get out
before the novel knows what I'm doing. If novels ever find out
you're writing them, you're done for." (53-54)
Anonymous. "Episodes."
Publishers Weekly 240(19) 10 May 1993: 67-68.
Poet, street minister, traveler and lover, Delattre (Tales of a Dalai Lama) has lived a rich life, and he recounts it in 92 two-page vignettes. Though the episodes stand on their own and Delattre encourages browsing, some readers may wish for a more developed narrative. Still, he tells amusing tales about his childhood and about people like the pest who prompted his friends to hold a fund-raising "Get Rid of Richard Night." He opened "an experimental coffeehouse ministry" in San Francisco and, as "the beatnik priest," was featured in Time and Newsweek. In Mexico, he barely escaped from two thugs and also met an Aztec-featured shoeshine boy who read Proust with his Francophile sailor father. Delattre married, divorced, found new love, studied and taught yoga, believes in UFOs and reports having a spontaneous orgasm after viewing a full moon. He has encountered the famous: he recalls concert promoter Bill Graham's beginnings, how author Richard Brautigan "could get drunk on anything" and how Neal Cassady died with Delattre's address in his pocket. In reaction to the latter news, Delattre decided, "I wanted to burn a slow flame, and last a long time." (67-68)
Donovan, Brad. "Food Stamps for the Stars."
Firestarter June 1996: 4-5.
Accounts of parties at Brautigan's Pine Creek, Montana, home are legendary: movie stars, gun practice off the back porch, drinking, lots of drinking, wild conversations, and spaghetti. Although tongue-in-cheek, Donovan, a fishing friend of Brautigan's, captures the wide-open spirit associated with a Brautigan party.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Dorn, Edward. "In Memoriam: Richard Brautigan."
The Denver Post Empire Magazine May 19, 1985: 22-23, 25, 27.
Edward Dorn says there is no history of morbidity in Brautigan's writing and that he saw himself and often referred to himself as a humorist.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Reprinted
This Recording 19 November 2009.
Retitled: "The Dreamer" and adds various photographs not included in the original.
Read online at the This Recording website
Way West: Stories, Essays, and Verse Accounts: 1963-1993. Santa Rosa, CA: Black Sparrow Press, 1993. 205-212.
Featured a companion article by
Jennifer Dunbar Dorn titled "The Perfect American" (see below).
Exquisite Corpse 4(1-2) January-February 1986: 13.
Retitled: "Richard Brautigan: Free Market Euthanasia." Edited by Andrei Codrescu. Published by the English Department at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Featured a companion article by
Jennifer Dunbar Dorn titled "The Perfect American" (see below).
Reviews
Burkman, Greg. "Way West: A Roundup of Stories, Essays and Verse Accounts, 1963-1993."
Booklist 90(4) 15 October 1993: 409.
From its scathing satires of academics, Republicans. and a new West "shining its noble light on Real Estate" to its immaculately researched, heartbreaking observations concerning the situations of Native Americans and its unsentimentalized memoriam to Richard Brautigan, Way West is a ghastly, funny tour de force rodeo of cultural clowns, moral imperatives, and all manner of riff-raff. Way out. (409)
A companion article to
Edward Dorn's "In Memoriam: Richard Brautigan" both in this magazine and Dorn's
Way West: Stories, Essays, and Verse Accounts: 1963-1993.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Feedback from Jennifer Dunbar Dorn
Your website looks really good. Lots in there.
Foote, Jennifer. "An Author's Long Descent. Richard Brautigan: The Troubled Cult Hero and His Path to Suicide."
Washington Post 23 January 1985: D8-D9.
"Reprinted from yesterday's early editions." Recounts Brautigan's literary career through the rememberances of friends. Provides biographical and bibliographical details.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Hayward, Claude. "Glimpses of Richard Brautigan in the Haight-Ashbury."
Richard Brautigan: Essays on the Writings and Life. Ed. John F. Barber. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2007. 113-120.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Feedback from Claude Hayward
Your Brautigan site was a fine surprise to encounter. Seeing the [Robert] Crumb listing right after the ComCo [Communication Company] listing reminded me of the great untold story of the time Crumb came to me at the Communication Company pad on DuBoce. He had some rather strange comics he wanted published, or printed so he could try to sell them. I dearly wanted to help him, but, in all honesty I had to tell him that I just couldn't produce the correct format for a comic with our equipment. Of course I would have died to be able to put his stuff out, but the Digger mentality was pretty strong upon me at the time and I would have had to give the stuff away. Crumb was destined for greater things. He did do some things with us, including the poster for our benefit concert on March 5th, 1967.
Richard [Brautigan] came around often, and he was easy to work with. His tastes pushed me to experimentation with the equipment. Mostly, while I would be deviling away with the machinery, he would hang out and talk with H'lane, my partner in those days. Thanks for providing this site.
Heilig, Steve. "Ianthe Brautigan Interview." Bolinas Hearsay News 28 January 2004: 1-4.
An interview on the occasion of Brautigan's birthday.
READ the full text of this interview.
Reprinted
Beat Scene 45 Summer 2004: 45-47.
Online Resource
Beat Scene magazine website
Hjortsberg, William. "The Bard of Rivers and Bars: Richard Brautigan and 'The Montana Gang'."
Big Sky Journal Arts Issue 2002: 72-78.
Three essays excerpted from
Hjortsberg's forthcoming biography of Brautigan. Features several photographs by
Erik Weber.
An accounting of the authors' search for Brautigan's ghost in Eugene, Oregon.
READ the full text of this article.
Keeler, Greg. Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan. Boise, ID: Limberlost Press, 2004.
A collection of stories about experiences shared with Richard Brautigan from 1978 to 1984.
Illustrated with photographs and Keeler's own cartoon drawings.
Keeler recalls Brautigan saying he felt split in two,
that there was the Richard Brautigan, the famous author, and there was Richard, the guy who lived day to day, the guy sitting in the car next to me who had to deal with the public's responses to the famous author." These stories attempt to get at both Brautigan's through their accounting of funny as well as poignant experiences Keeler shared with Brautigan. . . . I'm just hoping to give another perspective . . . and try to get a more complete picture of the leviathan that posed as the funny, disturbing, cruel, lovable and, especially, vulnerable man who rode in the car with me. (1-3)
Online Resources
Information about Keeler's book at the Limberlost Press website
Keeler, an English professor at Montana State Universitiy in Bozeman, Montana, maintains quotes and letters by Brautigan, as well as his own stories and poems about Brautigan, at his
Troutball website. Also features sound files of an interview conducted by FM Tokyo and facsimilies of ten
letters written by Brautigan to Keeler. Much of this material is collected in Keeler's book of Brautigan stories,
Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan.
Feedback from Greg Keeler
I was Richard's friend for a few years here in Montana. We did some pretty crazy stuff together, and I miss him tremendously. It's good to see folks like you keeping his candle lit.

Keeler, Greg. "Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan."
Beat Scene 45 Summer 2004: 42-44.
An interview with Greg Keeler conducted by
Beat Scene editor Kevin Ring. Discusses Keeler's relationship with Brautigan and his new collection of stories about Brautigan.
Online Resource
Beat Scene magazine website

—. "Stories about Richard Brautigan."
Beat Scene 43 Summer 2003: 16-24.
Excerpts from Keeler's memoir,
Waltzing with the Captain Front cover photographic portrait of Brautigan wearing a sheepskin by Christopher Felver that originally appeared in Felver's book,
The Poet Exposed. Several publicity photographs of Brautigan throughout the article, most taken from his books. Also includes Jack Kerouac, the
Diggers, Charles Bukowski, Kirby Doyle, Ted Joans, Jack Hirschman,
KULCHUR magazine, defining
Beat moments, etc.
Online Resource
Beat Scene magazine website

An interview with Greg Keeler was published on Monday, 19 December 2005 at the "Mick O'Grady" website maintained by Mike Daily.
Daily also wrote the introduction to an
interview by Susan Anderson with Virginia Aste, Brautigan's first wife.
Online Resource
Interview with Keeler at Daily's website
Hepworth, James R. "Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan."
The Bloomsbury Review. 24 (4) July-August 2004: ***?***.
Says Keeler's admiration is the driving force behind this memoir of Brautigan, a "kooky and gentle recollection of a genuine American character, one actually somewhat at odds with the popular image we have of Richard Brautigan as 'the bard of the flower children.'"
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Hepworth's review as a .pdf file at The Bloomsbury Review archive website
Hodder, Bruce. "Waltzing with the Captain: Remembering Richard Brautigan."
Outlaw Review Supplement. **?***.
READ this review.
Nicosia, Gerald. "Not Trout Fishing with Brautigan; Memoir Recalls Adventures with the Writer during his Montana Years."
San Francisco Chronicle August 22, 2004.
What makes this more than just a collection of funny stories, however, is the way Keeler weaves in many of Brautigan's own letters as well as the perspectives of others around him to show where Brautigan's anguish and mad antics are really coming from. Thus he writes of the relation between fact and fiction in Brautigan's life. . . . It remains for the critics and biographers to distill this achievement in a way that will both credit it adequately and make it accessible to future generations. With "Waltzing With the Captain," Greg Keeler has made a noble start.
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Nicosia's review at the San Francisco Chronicle website
Schmidt, Carol. "Friendship between Writers Brautigan and Keeler Celebrated in New Book."
MSU University News 4 March 2004.
READ the full text of this review.
Online Resource
Schmidt's review at the MSU News website
Manso, Peter and Michael McClure. "Brautigan's Wake."
Vanity Fair May 1985: 62-68, 112-116.
A re-evaluation of Brautigan, after his death, by his peers: Peter Manso (writer),
Michael McClure (poet), Ron Loewinsohn (poet),
Don Carpenter (novelist),
Lawrence Ferlinghetti (poet and publisher,
City Lights Books),
Donald M. Allen (editor and publisher), Helen Brann (literary agent), Richard Hodge (confidant and California Superior Court judge), Bobbie Louise Hawkins (poet and performer), David Fechheimer (private investigator and friend),
Ianthe Brautigan (daughter), Peter Berg (founder, with
Emmett Grogan and
Peter Cohen(Coyote) of the
Diggers), Tom McGuane (novelist), Dennis Hopper (actor), Siew-Hwa-Beh (girlfriend), Peter Fonda (actor), John Doss (doctor and friend), Margot Patterson Doss (writer and columnist),
Joanne Kyger (poet), Tony Dingman (friend), Ken Holmes (assistant coroner, Marin County), and Anthony Russo (detective sergeant, Marin County Sheriff's Office).
READ the full text of this memoir.
McClure, Michael. "Ninety-one Things about Richard Brautigan." Lighting the Corners: On Art, Nature, and the Visionary. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1993. 36-68.
A delination of thoughts, memories, and observations about Brautigan from someone who knew him during his early days in San Francisco.
McClure says, "these are notes written at typing speed as I reread all of Richard's writings (68). These notes were for his article "Brautigan's Wake," written with Peter Manso and published in
Vanity Fair (1985). They were not included in the article and were first published here.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Mergen, Barney. "A Strange Boy."
San Francisco Chronicle 20 January 1985 "This World" section: 20.
Mergen recounts "the memory of a warm June day in 1956 when [Brautigan] appeared at my door in Reno, Nev., introducing himself, 'Hello, I'm Richard Brautigan and I'm a poet,' and scaring my grandmother half to death." Brautigan, then 21, was traveling from Portland, Oregon to San Francisco, California. Brautigan found Mergen's name in Brushfire, the University of Nevada literary magazine and thought he "might be sympathetic to a homeless poet."
READ the full text of this memoir.
Plymell, Charles. "Remembering Richard Brautigan." Hand on the Doorknob: A Charles Plymell Reader. Sudbury, Massachusetts: Water Row Press, 2000: 102-103.
READ the full text of this memoir.
—. "Reba." Forever Wider: Poems New and Selected: 1954-1984. Metuchen, New Jersey: The Scarecrow Press, 1985: 69-71.
An earlier version of "Remembering Richard Brautigan" (see above).
READ the full text of this memoir.
Roiter, Margaret. "Death of A Poet: String Was Cut between Brautigan and the World." Bozeman Chronicle 31 October 1984: 3.
Discusses experiences in Brautigan's creative writing class at Montana State University and his death.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Smith, Barb. "Friends Say Stories Sensationalize Brautigan's Life after His Death." Bozeman Daily Chronicle 7 November 1984: 29.
Brautigan's Montana friends defend him against charges of a violent lifestyle made by Ken Kelley in a story by
Warren Hinckle in the
San Francisco Chronicle .
READ the full text of this memoir.
T. B. [sic] "New West Notes: Letter from the North." California Magazine January 1985: 116.
Laments the loss of North Beach, California characters. Recounts a conversation with Herb Gold, "North Beach doyen," about Brautigan.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Thomas, John. "Richard Brautigan: A Memoir."
Transit 10 Spring 2002: 18-20.
A memoir written years after the fact and therefore lacking some accuracy. But, the anecdotes create an interesting portrait of Brautigan.
Thomas, age 71, died just a few days before publication of this issue. The front cover features a photograph of Brautigan (right) and
Michael McClure (left, on motorcycle), taken on Haight Street in San Francisco, California, in 1968 by Rhyder McClure, Michael's cousin.
Feedback from Rhyder McClure
I'd been chatting with Richard when Michael (he's my cousin) pulled up on his chopper. I saw Michael last month—he did a reading here in New York City. I was packing a camera and commented, "Maybe this picture will be better than the one of you and Richard." He responded, "No one will ever take a better picture than that!"
Richard and I were friends in SF—we used to sit at Enricos and watch the world (mainly girls) go by. The only thing he ever said to me about writing has served me well for forty years: (because it was so long ago, this is a paraphrase) "If you're going to write, buy the best typewriter money can buy. It's something you're going to be spending a lot of time with, so make that part as easy on yourself as you can."
Also includes work by Charles Plymell, Jack Kerouac, Michael McClure, Aram Saroyan, Charles Bukowski,
Anne Waldman, Billy Childish, and A.D. Winans.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Torn, Rip. "Blunder Brothers: A Memoir."
Seasons of the Angler. Ed. David Seybold. New York: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988. 127-139.
A memoir that recounts fishing and drinking with Brautigan and in a larger sense a relationship with him over a period of years.
READ the full text of this memoir.
Wright, Lawrence. "The Life and Death of Richard Brautigan."
Rolling Stone (445) 11 April 1985: 29, 31, 34, 36, 38, 40, 59, 61.
Wright incorporates comments and memories of family and friends as he follows the reasonably well known facts of Brautigan's life and death. He provides some interesting insights into the psychological pressures perhaps working on Brautigan as he sought fame as a writer then struggled with its loss.

Features several photographs of Brautigan by Baron
Wolman, Erik
Weber, Roger Ressmeyer, and
Edmund Shea.
READ the full text of this memoir.