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AMBROSE BIERCE
Ambrose
Bierce,
author of An Occurrence at
Owl
Creek
Bridge
, was born
June 24, 1842
, Meigs county,
Ohio
,
U.S.
died 1914,
Mexico
. American
newspaperman, wit, satirist, and author of sardonic short stories based themes
of death and horror. His life ended
in an unsolved mystery.
Reared
in
Kosciusko County
,
Ind.
, Bierce became a
printer's devil (apprentice) on a
Warsaw
,
Ind.
, paper after about
a year in high school. In 1861 he enlisted in the 9th Indiana Volunteers and
fought in a number of American Cavil War battles, including
Shiloh
and
Chickamauga
. After being
seriously wounded in the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain in 1864, he served until
January 1865, and he received a merit promotion to major in 1867.
Resettling
in
San Francisco
, which was
experiencing an artistic renaissance, he began contributing to periodicals
particularly the News Letter, of which he became editor in 1868. Bierce was soon
the literary arbiter of the West Coast. The
Haunted
Valley
(1871) was his
first story. In December 1871 he married Mary Ellen Day, and from 1872 to 1875
the Bierces Lived in England, where he wrote for the London magazines Fun and
Figaro, edited the Lantern for the exited French empress Eug6nie, and
published three books, The Fiend's Delight (1872) Nuggets and Dust
Panned Out in California (1872), and Cobwebs from an Empty Skull
(1874).
In
1877 he became associate editor of the
San Francisco
Argonaut but
Left it in 1879-80 for an unsuccessful try at placer mining in Rockerville in
the
Dakota Territory
. Thereafter he was
editor of the
San Francisco
Wasp for
five years. In 1887 he joined the staff of Wittiam Randolph Hearst's San
Francisco Examiner, for which he wrote the Prattler column. In 1896
Bierce moved to
Washington
,
D.C.
, where he continued
newspaper and magazine writing. In 1913,
tired
of American Life, he went to
Mexico
, then in the middle
of a revolution. Led by Pancho Villa. His end is a mystery, but a reasonable
conjecture is that he was killed in the siege of Ojinaga in January 1914.
Bierce
separated from his wife, lost his two sons, and broke many friendships. As a
newspaper columnist, he specialized in critical attacks on amateur poets,
clergymen, bores, dishonest politicians, money grabbers, pretenders, and frauds
of all sorts. His principal books are In the Midst of L if e (1892),
which
included some of his finest stories, such as An Occurrence at Owl Creek
Bridge, A Horseman in the Sky, The Eyes of the Panther, The
Boarded Window and Can Such Things Be? (1893), which included The
Damned Thing and Moxon's Master. Bierce’s The Devil's Dictionary
(originally published in 1906 as The Cynic's Word Book) is a volume
of ironic, even bitter definitions that has often been reprinted. His Collected
Works was published in l2 volumes, 1909-12.
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