![]() ![]() His novels varied in style and tone, but most were irreverent in some ways, with flashes of humor ranging from sly to picaresque. Groom’s histories were tremendously accessible works, briskly paced and with a storyteller’s flair. ![]() He wrote seven other novels and 14 nonfiction books, including superb histories related to the War of 1812, the Civil War (three of them), World War I, World War II (three), the Vietnam War, the opening of the American West, the early heroes of human flight - and the history of the University of Alabama football, to boot. Groom, of course, knew that it was Gump who made him famous when the movie became a cultural touchstone, and he certainly appreciated it, but Groom also thought that novel was literarily among his slighter contrivances. ![]() He leaves behind a massive body of work and an indelible imprint on the memory of those who knew him. ![]() Groom, the journalist-novelist-historian who died on Thursday at age 77, was a tall man with a very big personality. Gump’s creator, Winston Groom, certainly could say the same. MOBILE, Alabama - At the very end of the novel bearing his name, the character Forrest Gump says, “At least I ain’t lived no hum-drum life.” ![]()
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