Stephen Harrigan was born in Oklahoma City
in 1948 and has lived in Texas since the age of five, growing up in
Abilene and Corpus Christi.
For many years he was a staff writer and
senior editor at Texas Monthly, and his articles and essays
have appeared in a wide range of other publications as well,
including The Atlantic, Outside, The New York Times
Magazine, Conde Nast Traveler, Audubon, Travel
Holiday, Life, and Slate. Many of his magazine
pieces have been collected in the essay collections
A Natural State (1988) and
Comanche Midnight (1995). His other
non-fiction books include Water and Light: A
Diver’s Journey to a Coral Reef, which was published by Houghton
Mifflin in 1992.
Harrigan is the author of four novels. His
first novel, Aransas, published by Alfred A.
Knopf, was listed by the New York Times as a notable book of
1980. Jacob’s Well was published by Simon
and Schuster in 1984 and cited as one of the year’s best books by
The Washington Post and The Dallas Morning News. In 2000,
Knopf published his novel The Gates of the Alamo,
which became a New York Times bestseller and notable book,
and which received a number of awards, including the TCU Texas Book
Award, the Western Heritage Award from the National Cowboy and
Western Heritage Museum, and the Spur Award for the Best Novel of
the West. In April 2006, Knopf published
Challenger Park, a novel about a woman astronaut torn between
her responsibilities as a mother and her dreams of flying in
space. Writing in the New York Times Book Review, Thomas
Mallon called Challenger Park “a fine, absorbing achievement,
probably the best science-factual novel about the space-faring
worlds of Houston and Cape Canaveral in the nearly half-century
since the first astronauts were chosen.”
Among the many movies Harrigan has written
for television are HBO’s award-winning The
Last of His Tribe, starring Jon Voight and Graham Greene, and
King of Texas, a western retelling of
Shakespeare’s King Lear for TNT, which starred Patrick Stewart,
Marcia Gay Harden, and Roy Scheider. His most recent television
production was The Colt, an adaptation
of a short story by the Nobel-prize winning author Mikhail Sholokhov,
which aired on The Hallmark Channel. For his screenplay of The
Colt, Harrigan was nominated for a Writers Guild Award and the
Humanitas Prize. Current projects in development include a feature
adaptation of Conn Iggulden’s “Emperor” novels, which he is
co-writing with William Broyles, Jr., and a film version of his
first novel, Aransas. He also recently worked with Robert Altman on
a feature version of S. R. Bindler’s documentary, Hands on a Hard
Body, about an endurance contest to win a pickup truck. Altman was
in pre-production on the movie at the time of his death in Nov.
2006.
A 1971 graduate of the
University of Texas, Harrigan lives in Austin, where he is on the
faculty of UT’s James A. Michener Center for Writers. He is also a
board member of the Texas Book Festival, and of Capital Area
Statues, Inc., a non-profit organization that commissions and raises
money for monumental works of sculpture celebrating the history and
culture of Texas. He and his wife, Sue Ellen, have three daughters,
Marjorie, Dorothy and Charlotte.