Lewis Grizzard - Published Works

Published Works

ADD: Shoot Low, Boys - They're Ridin' Shetland Ponies (In Search of True Grit) First Balantine Books Edition: March 1987 Fourteenth Printing: August 1991 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 85-61974

  • Kathy Sue Loudermilk, I Love You: A Good Beer Joint Is Hard to Find and Other Facts of Life (1 December 1979) (Collection of previously published Atlanta Journal-Constitution columns)
  • Won't You Come Home, Billy Bob Bailey?: An Assortment of Home-Cooked Journalism for People Who Wonder Why Clean Underwear Doesn't Grow on Trees (1 November 1980) (Collection of previously published Atlanta Journal-Constitution columns)
  • Glory! Glory! Georgia's 1980 Championship Season: The Inside Story (1981) (Loran Smith with Lewis Grizzard)
  • Don't Sit Under The Grits Tree With Anyone Else But Me (1 November 1981) (Collection of previously published Atlanta Journal-Constitution columns)
  • They Tore Out My Heart and Stomped That Sucker Flat (1 October 1982)
  • If Love Were Oil, I'd Be About A Quart Low (1 October 1983)
  • Elvis Is Dead and I Don't Feel So Good Myself (1 October 1984)
  • Shoot Low Boys - They're Riding Shetland Ponies (1 October 1985)
  • My Daddy Was A Pistol and I'm a Son of a Gun (1 October 1986)
  • When My Love Returns From The Ladies Room, Will I Be Too Old To Care? (1 October 1987) (Collection of previously published Atlanta Journal-Constitution columns)
  • Don't Bend Over In the Garden, Granny - You Know Them Taters Got Eyes (1 October 1988)
  • Lewis Grizzard on Fear of Flying (1 April 1989)
  • Lewis Grizzard's Advice To The Newly Wed . . . & the Newly Divorced (1 April 1989)
  • Chili Dawgs Always Bark At Night (1 September 1989) (Collection of previously published Atlanta Journal-Constitution columns)
  • Does A Wild Bear Chip In The Woods? (1 May 1990)
  • If I Ever Get Back To Georgia, I'm Gonna Nail My Feet To The Ground (1 October 1990)
  • Don't Forget To Call Your Momma; I Wish I Could Call Mine (1 April 1991)
  • You Can't Put No Boogie Woogie On The King of Rock and Roll (1 October 1991) (Collection of previously published Atlanta Journal-Constitution columns)
  • I Haven't Understood Anything Since 1962 and Other Nekkid Truths (1 October 1992)
  • I Took A Lickin' and Kept on Tickin' and Now I Believe In Miracles (1 January 1994)

Read more about this topic:  Lewis Grizzard

Famous quotes containing the words published works, published and/or works:

    Literature that is not the breath of contemporary society, that dares not transmit the pains and fears of that society, that does not warn in time against threatening moral and social dangers—such literature does not deserve the name of literature; it is only a façade. Such literature loses the confidence of its own people, and its published works are used as wastepaper instead of being read.
    Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)

    Until the Women’s Movement, it was commonplace to be told by an editor that he’d like to publish more of my poems, but he’d already published one by a woman that month ... this attitude was the rule rather than the exception, until the mid-sixties. Highest compliment was to be told, “You write like a man.”
    Maxine Kumin (b. 1925)

    Nature is so perfect that the Trinity couldn’t have fashioned her any more perfect. She is an organ on which our Lord plays and the devil works the bellows.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)