World War
II got me out of Oklahoma and into the Navy for three years, but after the
war I returned to finish my education at Oklahoma State University. I taught
English there for several years and published many stories about the American
West. It seemed that I was settling in for a career of teaching and writing
in my native state.
Then out of the blue, I had a chance to go to Africa to work in the U. S. foreign assistance program. All of my boyhood reading came flooding back. With my wife's enthusiastic agreement, we packed our bags, convinced our two young daughters that they were in for a big adventure and headed overseas. We never got back to Oklahoma except for an occasional visit.
Two years
in Ethiopia were followed by two in Libya. Then I joined the Peace Corps
staff, started the Peace Corps program in Nigeria, and was director of the
Peace Corps in India. After the Peace Corps, I worked for the Ford Foundation
in the Philippines and Indonesia.
But no matter where I was or what I was doing, I found time to write. The things I felt I was learning about understanding other cultures and about people of different cultures understanding each other seemed worth sharing with young readers. While overseas I wrote or co-authored a book of Ethiopian folktales, a novel about Americans working in Nigeria, and other books.
Since returning
to the United States to live, I have devoted most of my time to writing.
A number of my books deal with complex social issues such as the plight
of migrant farmworkers and the efforts of immigrants to find their place
in America. I believe that such subjects can be made interesting to young
readers because they are about real people coping with real and serious
problems.
My wife Martha and I now live in Williamsburg, Virginia. This quiet cradle of American democracy is a wonderfully rich place for me to write about my country, which is exactly what I want to do now. I believe that my years overseas have made me a better observer of my own country. A delightful bonus is that my family is part of my life as a writer. Martha is my best critic and helps with research. Our daughter Jennifer, a talented photographer, has taken the photographs for seven of my books. Our daughter Melissa, a newspaper editor and writer, has collaborated with me on two books.
I have lived long enough and seen enough of the world to know what a fortunate man I am.
Complete biographical information on Brent Ashabranner can be found in Something About the Author: Author Biography Series, Volume 14; Contemporary Authors, New Revised Series, Volume 27, and the CD-ROM Junior DISCovering Authors (JrDA).
My Books
On the Mall in Washington D.C.: A Visit to America's Front Yard.\.
(Photographs by Jennifer Ashabranner), Twenty-First Century Books, 2002.
Great American Memorials series
(Photographs by Jennifer Ashabranner), Twenty-First Century Books:
- Their Names to Live: What the Vietnam Memorial Means to America.
1998 - Badge of Valor: The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial.
2000 - A Date with Destiny: The Women in Military Service for America Memorial.
2000 - Remembering Korea: The Korean War Veterans Memorial.
2001 - No Better Hope: What the Lincoln Memorial Means to America.
2001 - The Washington Monument: A Beacon for America.
2002
The New African Americans.
Linnet, 1999
The Lion's Whiskers and Other Ethiopian Tales.
(with Russell Davis). Originally published as The Lion's Whiskers: Tales of high Africa. Little 1959. Revised edition, Linnet, 1996.
Dark Harvest: Migrant Farmworkers in America.
Photographs by Paul Conklin. Dodd, 1985, Reissued by Linnet, 1993.
The Choctaw Code
(with Russell Davis). McGraw, 1961. Reissued by Linnet, 1994. A novel about an Indian's honor and courage, set in the Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, in the 1890's.
To Seek a Better World: The Haitian Minority in America.
Cobblehill, 1997.
A Strange and Distant Shore: Indians of the Great Plains in Exile.
Cobblehill, 1996.
Our Beckoning Borders: Illegal Immigration to America.
Cobblehill, 1993.
Still a Nation of Immigrants.
Cobblehill, 1993.
To work with Brent Ashabranner, see our Speakers Bureau.



