Nathan Heard, whose gritty fiction depicting prison life drew praise from Amiri Baraka and others, has died.
Heard's writing career started in New Jersey State Prison in Trenton while serving seven years for armed robbery. He started reading soft-core pornographic novels passed to him by a cellmate, said H. Bruce Franklin, a professor at Rutgers University, where Heard later taught creative writing.Heard, who dropped out of high school after the 10th grade, believed he could do a better job and started writing about his old neighborhood. His mother showed the manuscript to his lawyer, who got the novel published.
His 1968 debut, "Howard Street," sold more than 1 million copies and was acclaimed for its gritty realism and insight into the urban black experience.
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