C. D. B. Bryan


Courtlandt Dixon Barnes Bryan, better known as C. D. B. Bryan, was an American author and journalist.

Biography

He was born on April 22, 1936 in Manhattan, New York City. Bryan attended Berkshire School in the class of 1954 and earned a Bachelor of Arts at Yale University in 1958, where he wrote for campus humor magazine The Yale Record. His parents were Joseph Bryan III and Katharine Barnes Bryan; after they divorced his mother married author John O'Hara.
He served in the U.S. Army in South Korea, but not happily. He was mobilized again for the Berlin Crisis of 1961. He was an intelligence officer.
He was editor of the satirical Monocle, Colorado State University writer-in-residence, visiting lecturer University of Iowa writers workshop, special editorial consultant at Yale, visiting professor University of Wyoming, adjunct professor Columbia University, fiction director at the New York City Writers Community from, lecturer in English University of Virginia, and Bard Center fellow Bard College.
His first novel, P. S. Wilkinson, won the Harper Prize in 1965.
Bryan is best known for his non-fiction book Friendly Fire. It began as an idea he sold to William Shawn for an article in The New Yorker, then grew into a series of articles, and then a book. It describes an Iowa farm family, Gene and Peg Mullen, and their reaction and change of heart after their son's accidental death by friendly fire in the Vietnam War. One of the real-life characters featured in the book was future Operation Desert Storm commander H. Norman Schwarzkopf.
It was made into an Emmy-winning 1979 television movie of the same name, for which he shared a Peabody Award. It's also been cited in professional military studies.
Bryan died from cancer on December 15, 2009 at his home in Guilford, Connecticut.

Partial bibliography