- James H. Street
James Howell Street (
October 15 ,1903 –September 28 ,1954 ) was a U.S.journalist , minister, and writer of Southernhistorical novel s.Street was born in
Lumberton, Mississippi , in 1903. As a teenager, he began working as a journalist for newspapers in Laurel andHattiesburg, Mississippi . At the age of 20, Street decided to become aBaptist minister, attendingSouthwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and Howard College. Unsatisfied with his pastoral work after ministering stints inMissouri ,Mississippi , andAlabama , Street returned to journalism in 1926.After briefly holding a position with the
Pensacola, Florida "Journal", Street joined the staff of theAssociated Press . The AP position took him to New York, where he began freelance writing fiction. Hired away from the AP by theNew York World-Telegram in 1937, Street sold a short story ("A Letter to the Editor") to Cosmopolitan magazine, which caught the eye of film producerDavid Selznick , who turned it into a hit film, "Nothing Sacred".His success allowed him to write full-time, and throughout the 1940s he worked on a five-novel series of historical fiction about the progress of the Dabney family through the 19th century. The Dabney pentology--"Oh, Promised Land", "Tap Roots", "By Valor and Arms", "Tomorrow We Reap", and "Mingo Dabney"--explored classic Southern issues of race and
honor , and strongly characterized Street's struggle to reconcile his Southern heritage with his feelings about racial injustice. The series was a critial and popular success, with several of the books being made into feature films.Street also published two popular novels about boys and dogs, "The Biscuit Eater" and "
Good-bye, My Lady ", both of which were turned into movies, and a set of semi-autobiographical novels about a Baptist minister, "The Gauntlet" and "The High Calling".Street died of a heart attack on
September 28 ,1954 .Major works
*"The Biscuit Eater (1939)
*"Oh, Promised Land" (1940)
*"In My Father's House" (1941)
*"Tap Roots" (1942)
*"By Valour and Arms" (1944)
*"The Gauntlet" (1945)
*"Tomorrow We Reap" (1949)
*"Mingo Dabney" (1950)
*"The High Calling" (1951)
*"Good-Bye, My Lady " (1954)References
*MacIntyre, Fergus Gwynplaine (2005). "Doomed Girl Brings Glow to City". "New York Daily News", April 11, 2005.
*Roberts, Lindsay (1999). " [http://web.archive.org/web/20040622224707/http://www.shs.starkville.k12.ms.us/mswm/MSWritersAndMusicians/writers/JamesStreet/StreetJames.html James Street: A Biography] ". The Mississippi Writers and Musicians Project of Starkville High School. Archived June 22, 2004.External links
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