A memorial service celebrating the life and work of Atlanta author Paul Hemphill will be held Wednesday, July 15, at noon in the chapel of A.S. Turner & Sons Funeral home in Decatur. The address is: 2773 North Decatur Road, Decatur, GA 30033 next to DeKalb Medical Center.
The former Atlanta Journal columnist died here Saturday after a lengthy battle with cancer.
(Read Hemphill’s AJC obit, sign the guest book, read an excerpt from his classic essay “Quitting the Paper” , his NYT obit and the tribute in the Washington Post).
Visitation will be Tuesday evening, July 14, from 6 until 8 p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you consider donations to the Auburn Foundation, 321 Biggin Hall, Auburn, AL 36849, Att: Mary Baird, The Atlanta Community Food Bank, 732 Joseph E. Lowery Blvd. NW, Atlanta, GA 30318 or Hospice Atlanta, 1244 Park Vista Drive NE, Atlanta, GA 30319.
One comment Add your comment
Ron Wright
July 14th, 2009
5:58 pm
Your obituary of Paul Hemphill on July 12th was well written and covered most of the highlights of this great journalist and writer, but it was negligent in displaying the talent and the complexity of this American writer. It’s almost like saying that William Faulkner was a good Mississippi writer. You limit his talent when you say he chronicled the blue collar South. Yes, he told the stories of many ordinary people of the South when he wrote of country and western music, Hank Williams, stock car racing and his father driving big rigs across the nation. But in “Leaving Birmingham: Notes of a Native Son”, “Mayor: Notes on the Sixties”, and many of his daily newspaper columns he told the truth about the segregated South, the brutality of the Birmingham police, the burning of black churches in rural Alabama and the evil nature of one man against another. Part of the reason his books did not sell as well as some other Southern writers did was due to his liberal view of Southern politics and economics and the fact that most of his books were non-fiction. He was recognized for his writing ability with a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard in 1968-1969. He was given a more balanced obituary in the New York Times than he received from his old newspaper, The Atlanta Journal. His fans will miss him.