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Gerald William Haslam (March 18, 1937 – April 13, 2021)[1] was an author focused on rural and small towns in California's Great Central Valley including its poor and working-class people of all colors. A native of Oildale, California, Haslam has received numerous literary awards.
Haslam was born in Bakersfield, California in 1937.[2] The son of an oil worker, he grew up in nearby Oildale where Merle Haggard was a neighbor.[2][3] He attended Garces Memorial High School before working as a farm field hand, a store clerk and an oil field roustabout and roughneck. He served in the U.S. Army from 1958 through 1960. He attended Bakersfield College 1955–57, 1960–61, then married Janice Eileen Pettichord in 1961.[2] He later attended San Francisco State University, where he earned a B.A. in 1963 and an M.A. in 1965. Haslam also attended, and gave great credit to, Washington State University, 1965 and 1966. He completed a Ph.D. from The Union Graduate School (Cincinnati, OH), in 1980. He played college football, ran track and boxed in the Golden Gloves. He is a member of the Bakersfield College Track/Cross-country Hall of Fame.[citation needed]
Concurrent with his teaching at SSU, Haslam published numerous articles and stories in national and regional magazines. He was a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle's Sunday magazine and was a Contributing Writer for the Los Angeles Times Sunday magazine, and continued to be an op-ed contributor to the Sacramento Bee. Haslam also served as a commentator for KQED-FM's "The California Report." His writing is widely anthologized.
With his wife Janice E. Haslam, Haslam examined the life of Senator S. I. Hayakawa (In Thought and Action: The Enigmatic Life of S. I. Hayakawa) and the life of a Depression migrant (Leon Patterson: A California Story). Reviewer David Peck labeled Haslam "the quintessential California writer." ("Gerald Haslam. the Heartland's Voice," The Californians, Jan.-Feb., 1988).[citation needed]
Personal lifeedit
Haslam's wife, Janice Eileen Haslam,[2] has edited all his books and co-authored three of them. They resided in Penngrove, California.[2] They are the parents of Fred Haslam, lead developer of Sim City 2000; of "Anomalies" website developer Garth Haslam; and of magazine editor Alexandra Russell, who has been her father's partner on two books. His other two children—research biologist Simone Haslam Sawyer and Carlos Haslam, a vivarium manager -— are not involved in writing or publishing. He was also survived by 14 grandchildren.[3]
According to Russell, Haslam died of prostate cancer at Petaluma Valley Hospital in Petaluma on April 13, 2021, aged 84, which was confirmed by an article in The Press Democrat.[3] Haslam wrote his own obituary, which was discovered shortly after his death.[4]
Literary awardsedit
2016 Eric Hoffer Legacy Fiction Award (from US Review of Books) for Grace Period
2016 Eric Hoffer Culture Award, Honorable Mention, (from US Review of Books) for Leon Patterson: A California Story
2013 Award of Merit (from the American Association for State and Local History) for In Thought and Action
2013 S. I. Hayakawa Book Prize (from the Institute of General Semantics) for In Thought and Action
2006 Josephine Miles Award (from PEN Oakland) for Haslam's Valley
2005 Delbert and Edith Wylder Award (from the Western Literature Association)
2004 Certificate of Commendation (from the California Arts Council)
The Language of the Oil Fields (Old Adobe Press, 1972)
Voices of a Place: Social and Literary Essays from the Other California (Devil Mountain Books, 1987)
Coming of Age in California (Devil Mountain Books 1990; second, expanded edition, 2000)
The Other California (Capra Press, 1990; second, expanded edition, Univ. of Nevada Press, 1994)
The Great Central Valley: California's Heartland (with photographers Stephen Johnson & Robert Dawson; Univ. of California Press, 1993)
Workin' Man Blues: Country Music in California (With Alexandra Haslam Russell & Richard Chon, Univ. of California Press, 1999)
In Thought and Action: The Enigmatic Life of S. I. Hayakawa (with Janice E. Haslam; Univ. of Nebraska Press, 2011)
Leon Patterson: A California Story (with Janice E. Haslam, Devil Mountain Books, 2014)
Anthologies editededit
(ed.) Forgotten Pages of American Literature (Houghton-Mifflin, 1970)
(ed.) Western Writing (University of New Mexico Press, 1974)
(ed. with James D. Houston) California Heartland: Writing from the Great Central Valley (Capra Press, 1978)
(ed. with J. Golden Taylor, et al.) Literary History of the American West (Texas Christian University Press, 1987)
(ed.) Many Californias: Literature from the Golden State (University of Nevada Press, 1992; second edition, 1999)
(ed. with Alexandra R. Haslam) Where Coyotes Howl and Wind Blows Free: Growing Up in the West (Univ of Nevada Press, 1995)
(ed.) Jack London's Golden State: Selected California Writings (Heyday Books, 1999)
Booklets and Monographsedit
William Eastlake (Steck-Vaughn Southwest Writers' Series, 1970)
(ed.) Afro-American Oral Literature (Harper & Row, 1974)
Jack Schaefer (Boise State University Western Writers' Series, 1976)
Voices of a Place: The Great Central Valley (California Academy of Sciences, 1986)
Lawrence Clark Powell (Boise State University Western Writers' Series, 1992)
(with Stephen Glasser) Out of the Slush Pile (Poets & Writers Inc., 1993)
The Horned Toad (Thwack! Pow! Productions, 1995)
An Instructor's Guide to Where Coyotes Howl and Wind Blows Free (Univ. of Nevada Press, 1996)
Gerald Haslam in Conversation with Jonah Raskin (Sonoma County Literary Arts Guild, 2006)
Referencesedit
^"Gerald Haslam, author who chronicled life in rural California, dies at 84". Los Angeles Times. 2021-04-22. Archived from the original on 2022-06-29.
^ abcdeMayer, Steven (March 2, 2013). "For valley writer Haslam, it's like he never left us". The Bakersfield Californian. Retrieved May 6, 2017.
^ abcdGraham, Andrew (22 April 2021). "Gerald Haslam, SSU professor and 'working man's writer' who chronicled Central Valley, dies at 84". The Press Democrat. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
^"Gerald W. Haslam [1937-2021]". Gerald Haslam Personal Website. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
Locklin, Gerald & Charles Stetler, "Interview with Gerald Haslam," Home Planet News, 4:3 (Fall 1983)
Maloney, Mary Grace, Central Valley Mythology: The Works of Gerald Haslam, Honors Humanities Thesis, Stanford University, 1985
Peck, David,, "Gerald Haslam, the Heartland's Voice," The Californians, Jan-Feb 1988
Penna, Christina, "Heartland," California English 23:2 (March–April 1987)
Ronald, Ann, "Gerald Haslam and Ann Ronald: A Conversation," Western American Literature, XXX:3 (August 1987)
Siegel, Mark,, "Contemporary Trends in Western American Fiction," A Literary History of the American West (Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press, 1978
Speer, Laurel, "Harry and Gerry." Small Press Review, June, 1988
Starr, Kevin,, "Six Californias and the Central Valley," State Librarian's Weekly Column (online), May 19, 1995
Weeks, Jonina, A Contemporary Western Writer, Gerald Haslam: His Means to a New West and the World, Sonoma State University Master's Thesis, 1988
Wylder, Delbert, "Recent Western Fiction," Journal of the West, January 1988
External linksedit
Gerald W. Haslam page on Nevada County, CA Library site
Gerald Haslam's Website
International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004, Routledge, 2003, ISBN 978-1-85743-179-7