This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: "Christian Bauman" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (April 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
Christian Bauman
Born (1970-06-15) June 15, 1970 (age 53)
Easton, Pennsylvania, U.S.
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUnited States
EducationNorth Hunterdon High School
Period21st century
GenreNovels and essays
Notable worksThe Ice Beneath You, Voodoo Lounge, In Hoboken
Children2

Christian Bauman (born June 15, 1970) is an American novelist, essayist, and lyricist.

Early life and education

Bauman was born in Easton, Pennsylvania on June 15, 1970. He began grade school while living in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, and moved to the Quakertown section of Franklin Township, New Jersey[1] when he was in the fourth grade. He remained there until he left home at age 17. He graduated from North Hunterdon High School near Clinton, New Jersey in 1988 and did not attend college.[2]

Bauman's family traveled a great deal around North America and Europe when he was a child. The family spent a year in India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka in 1983–84, when Bauman would have been in 8th grade. Bauman was raised by his stepfather (a philosophy professor) and mother (a physician); his biological father was only an occasional presence in his life and spent a year in prison when Bauman was a child. In a 2003 interview with Terry Gross on NPR's Fresh Air, Bauman said his childhood was not a particularly happy one.

Career

A former soldier, Bauman authored the 2002 novel The Ice Beneath You about the return of a young American soldier from Somalia. National Book Award-winning writer Robert Stone, writing about Bauman's 2005 novel Voodoo Lounge about a female soldier with HIV during the 1994 occupation of Haiti, said, "The prose in Voodoo Lounge reverberates in the white space around it." Bauman's first two novels are among the very small group of war-based literary fiction produced by Generation X. His third novel, In Hoboken (2008), is a departure from the first two, centered on a group of young musicians in the mid-1990s, and the mental-health facility where one of them works. Reviewing In Hoboken, critic Paul Constant wrote, "Bauman is an incredible writer. This is one of those books -- like Lethem when he's cooking, or Chabon at his most vibrant -- when every line snaps and propels you forward." Bauman's short essays appeared regularly on NPR's All Things Considered between 2003 and 2006. Bauman is the creative director of an advertising agency in New York City. He regularly updates his personal blog, including posts about progress on two new novels.

The subject matter of Bauman's first two novels was drawn from his experiences serving as a soldier in the United States Army. He joined the army in 1991, at age 21, and remained in for four years. He was a member of the small army boat field (Army Waterborne), and served in Somalia in 1992-93 (on an LCM-8), and Haiti in 1994 (on the LSV-1). In both cases, Bauman was among the first American troops in the deployment—within the opening weeks of the Somalia mission, and within the first hour of the Haiti occupation.

Following his honorable discharge in 1995, Bauman spent the next few years writing and playing guitar on the North American folk circuit, both alone and as part of the group Camp Hoboken, which included folksingers Gregg Cagno and Linda Sharar. Bauman was an opener for acts including Pete Seeger, Jack Hardy, John Gorka, Odetta, Cheryl Wheeler, and Livingston Taylor, at venues such as Godfrey Daniels, Passim, Eddie's Attic, The Iron Horse, and Freight & Salvage. This time period serves as the basis of Bauman's third novel, In Hoboken.

Bauman wrote both songs and short stories during the 1990s. Some of the songs, including one called "Kismaayo", written in Mogadishu and mailed back to Jack Hardy, who then performed it at The Bottom Line, are in the Smithsonian's Folkways Collection of New York's Fast Folk recordings. None of Bauman's short stories from the time have been published. A few small sections of The Ice Beneath You were written in Somalia during Bauman's deployment there, but the majority was penned in 1999–2000; the novel was purchased by Simon & Schuster in 2001 and published in 2002. In his book What Every Person Should Know About War, author Chris Hedges called The Ice Beneath You "one of the finest books about life in the American army."

On NPR, the majority of Bauman's commentaries for All Things Considered have been about the four years he was a soldier, but he has also written about his origins as a writer, his daughters, and his time as a touring musician.

Personal life

Bauman's has two daughters: Kristina born in 1988 and Fiona born in 1999.

Novels

Other works

References

  1. ^ Christian Bauman, Farley's Bookshop. Accessed September 5, 2022. "I grew up mostly right across the river in New Jersey in a little farm town called Quakertown between Clinton and Flemington."
  2. ^ Hyman, Vicki. "Literary Jersey: a look at the state's most famous characters and locations", The Star-Ledger, March 15, 2010. Accessed June 29, 2018. "Christian Bauman, who graduated from North Hunterdon High School and spent a year couch-surfing in Hoboken after getting out of the Army, writes of that time in his novel In Hoboken, set in the mid-'90s, as the Mile-Square City transitioned from In the Waterfront to Friends, a river removed."