- James Boyd (novelist)
James Boyd (
July 2 ,1888 –February 25 ,1944 ), the son of a wealthy coal and oil family inPennsylvania , was an American novelist.Boyd's parents, John Yeomans Boyd and Eleanor Gilmore Herr Boyd, were from
North Carolina and he was born inDauphin County, Pennsylvania . He attendedPrinceton University where he wrote verse and fiction for the "Tiger" and was its managing editor in his senior year. After graduation in 1910, he studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, and served overseas with the Army Ambulance Service inWorld War I . After World War I, due to many illnesses, he was forced into retirement and moved toWeymouth to a house his grandfather built near Southern Pines. Boyd's first book, "Drums", was set inEdenton, North Carolina , and has been called the best novel written about theAmerican Revolution [cite book |author=Magill, Frank N. (ed.) |title=Cyclopedia of World Authors |chapter=James Boyd |year=1958 |publisher=Harper & Row |location=New York |pages=pp. 124–5 ] . He wrote five historical novels, including "Bitter Creek", which were thought to have elevated the genre through greater historical accuracy, psychological and sociological awareness, and formal craftsmanship.In 1940, Boyd organized the Free Company of Players, a group of American writers. This was a coalition of talent that, despite the powerful opposition of right-wing conservative interests, produced a series of original
radio play s in response to what they saw as antidemocratic attitudes prevalent in America due to the growing war in Europe. One of his major accomplishments was to bring to his hometown ofWeymouth many of the finest writers of the time. Some of the writers who attended werePaul Green ,Thomas Wolfe ,Sherwood Anderson ,William Faulkner ,Struthers Burt , andJohn Galsworthy . In 1941, Boyd bought "The Pilot", a regional newspaper.Bibliography
* "Drums" (1925)
* "Marching On" (1927)
* "Long Hunt" (1930)
* "Bitter Creek" (1939)
* "Roll River" (1935)
* "The Free Company Presents"
* "Eighteen Poems" (1944)
* "Old Pines and Other Stories"External links
* [http://www.weymouthcenter.org/jamesboyd.htm The James Boyd Library]
References
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