- John D. MacDonald
Infobox Writer
name = John D. MacDonald
imagesize = 200px
birthdate = birth date|1916|7|24|mf=y
birthplace =Sharon, Pennsylvania ,United States
deathdate = death date and age|1986|12|28|1916|7|24|mf=y
deathplace =
occupation = novelist, short story writer
nationality = American
period = 1945-1986
genre =Detective fiction
influenced =Carl Hiaasen ,Stephen King ,Spider Robinson ,Warren Zevon Dean Koontz John Dann MacDonald (
July 24 ,1916 –December 28 ,1986 ) was an Americanauthor .A prolific writer of crime and suspense novels, many of them set in his adopted home of
Florida , McDonald's best-known works include the popular and critically-acclaimedTravis McGee series, and his novel "The Executioners ", which was adapted into the film "Cape Fear". In 1972, MacDonald was named a grand master of theMystery Writers of America , and he won theAmerican Book Award in 1980.Stephen King King, Stephen. "On Writing" (Hodder and Stoughton, 2000, ISBN 0340769963)] praised McDonald as "the great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storyteller."Early life
Born in
Sharon, Pennsylvania , MacDonald enrolled at theWharton School of the University of Pennsylvania but dropped out during his sophomore year to work menial jobs inNew York City . While attending the School of Management atSyracuse University , he met Dorothy Prentiss. They married in 1937, and he graduated from Syracuse the following year. In 1939, he received an MBA fromHarvard University . MacDonald was later able to make good use of his education in business and economics by incorporating elaborate business swindles into the plots of a number of his novels.Writing career
Early pulp stories
In 1940 MacDonald accepted a direct commission in the army Ordnance Corps, but later served in the OSS in the
Far East duringWorld War II . While still in the military, his literary career began accidentally when he wrote ashort story in 1945 and mailed it home for the amusement of his wife. She submitted it to themagazine [http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/aids/story/#history "Story"] without his knowledge, and it was accepted. In the first four months after his discharge, he completely concentrated on writing short stories, generating some 800,000 words and losing 20 pounds while typing during 14-hour daily sessions seven days a week. It netted him only hundreds of rejection slips, but in the fifth month, a $40 sale to thepulp magazine "Dime Detective" set his career in motion, and he continued to sell to the detective, mystery, adventure, sports, western andscience fiction pulps. As the boom inpaperback novels expanded, he successfully made the jump to longer fiction with his first novel, "The Brass Cupcake", published in 1950 byFawcett Publications ' Gold Medal Books. His science fiction included the story "Cosmetics" in "Astounding " (1948) and the novels "Wine of the Dreamers" (1951) and "Ballroom of the Skies" (1952).Hardboiled Thrillers
Between 1953 and 1964, MacDonald specialized in crime thrillers, many of which are now considered masterpieces of the
hardboiled genre. Most of these novels were published aspaperback originals, although some were later republished in hardbound editions. Many, such as "Dead Low Tide" (1953), were set in his adopted home of Florida, and were effective in suggesting a sinister aura lurking beneath the glittery surface of that state. Novels such as "The Executioners" (1957) (which was twice filmed as "Cape Fear", first in 1962 and again in 1991) and "One Monday We Killed them All" (1962) penetrated the minds of psychopathic killers. As Macdonald honed his craft, he developed his narrative "voice," one of the most distinctive in the suspense fiction field.Travis McGee
MacDonald's protagonists were often intelligent and introspective men, sometimes with a hard cynical streak.
Travis McGee , the "salvage consultant" and "knight in rusting armor," was all of that. He first appeared in the 1964 novel "The Deep Blue Good-by " and was last seen in "The Lonely Silver Rain " in 1985. All titles in the 21-volume series include a color, and the novels usually feature an ever-changing array of female companions, plus an appearance by a sidekick known only as "Meyer," [G. Ludwig Meyer, Ph.D.] a retired economist. AsSherlock Holmes had his well-known address on Baker Street, McGee had his trademark lodgings on his 52-foothouseboat "Busted Flush", named for thepoker hand that started the run of luck in which he won her. She's docked at Slip F-18, Bahia Mar marina,Fort Lauderdale, Florida .Influence
Various writers have acknowledged the trail that MacDonald and McGee blazed, including
Carl Hiaasen in an introduction to a 1990s edition of "The Deep Blue Good-by": "Most readers loved MacDonald's work because he told a rip-roaring yarn. I loved it because he was the first modern writer to nailFlorida dead-center, to capture all its languid sleaze, racy sense of promise, and breath-grabbing beauty."Most of the current crop of Florida-based mystery writers acknowledge a debt to MacDonald, including Randy Wayne White, James Hall, Les Standiford, Jonathon King, Tim Dorsey to name just a few. And Lawrence Block's New York-based fictional hero, Matthew Scudder, is a character who makes his living doing just what McGee does -- favors for friends who have no other recourse, then taking his cut.
Homage to MacDonald was evident in the 1981-88 CBS-TV series "
Simon & Simon " with scenes showing Rick Simon's boat docked at Slip F-18 in San Diego.The
science fiction writerSpider Robinson has made it clear that he is also among MacDonald's admirers. The bartender inCallahan's Crosstime Saloon , Mike Callahan, is married to Lady Sally McGee, whose last name is almost certainly a tribute to Travis. In a recent sequel to the Callahan's series, "Callahan's Key", a group of regulars from the former saloon decide they've had enough ofLong Island , so they move toKey West, Florida , in a colorful caravan of modifiedschool bus es. On their way to Key West, they stop at a marina near Fort Lauderdale specifically to visit Slip F-18 (where "Busted Flush" was usually moored) and meet a local who was the prototype for McGee's sidekick Meyer. The slip is empty, with a small plaque mentioning "Busted Flush".The popular
mystery writerDean Koontz has also acknowledged in an interview with Bookreporter.com's Marlene Taylor that MacDonald is "(His) favorite author of all time... I've read everything he wrote four or five times."Media adaptations
MacDonald's novel "Soft Touch" was the basis for the film "Man-Trap" (1961). His 1957 novel "The Executioners" was filmed in 1962 as "Cape Fear", a dark thriller of strong suspense and menace starring
Gregory Peck andRobert Mitchum . Martin Scorsese directed the 1991 remake of "Cape Fear". Among other film or television adaptations of MacDonald's work, the 1984 "A Flash of Green" with Ed Harris was probably the most successful artistically. When Travis McGee arrived on the big screen in 1970 with "Darker Than Amber", the film received favorable reviews from Roger Ebert and other critics. "The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything " was adapted for a 1980 TV movie that failed to capture the spirit of the original novel. The novella "Linda" was filmed twice for television, in 1973 (with Stella Stevens in the title role) and 1993 (withVirginia Madsen ). The 1980 TV movie "Condominium", based on MacDonald's novel, starred Dan Haggerty and Barbara Eden. The 1983 TV movie; Travis McGee: The Empty Copper Sea starring Sam Elliott.Bibliography
Travis McGee novels
In chronological order:
* (1964) "The Deep Blue Good-by "
* (1964) "Nightmare in Pink "
* (1964) "A Purple Place for Dying "
* (1964) "The Quick Red Fox "
* (1965) "A Deadly Shade of Gold "
* (1965) "Bright Orange for the Shroud "
* (1966) "Darker than Amber "
* (1966) "One Fearful Yellow Eye "
* (1968) "Pale Gray for Guilt "
* (1968) "The Girl in the Plain Brown Wrapper "
* (1969) "Dress Her in Indigo "
* (1970) "The Long Lavender Look "
* (1972) "A Tan and Sandy Silence "
* (1973) "The Scarlet Ruse "
* (1973) "The Turquoise Lament "
* (1975) "The Dreadful Lemon Sky "
* (1978) "The Empty Copper Sea "
* (1979) "The Green Ripper "
* (1981) "Free Fall in Crimson "
* (1982) "Cinnamon Skin "
* (1985) "The Lonely Silver Rain "Non-series novels
* (1950) "
The Brass Cupcake "
* (1951) "Murder for the Bride "
* (1951) "Judge Me Not "
* (1951) "Weep for Me "
* (1952) "The Damned"
* (1953) "Dead Low Tide"
* (1953) "The Neon Jungle "
* (1953) "Cancel All Our Vows "
* (1954) "All These Condemned "
* (1954) "Area of Suspicion "
* (1954) "Contrary Pleasure "
* (1955) "A Bullet for Cinderella "(reprinted as On the Make)
* (1956) "Cry Hard, Cry Fast "
* (1956) "April Evil "
* (1956) "Border Town Girl "(reprinted as Five Star Fugitive)
* (1956) "Murder in the Wind "(reprinted as Hurricane)
* (1956) "You Live Once "(reprinted as You Kill Me)
* (1957) "Death Trap"
* (1957) "The Price of Murder "
* (1957) "The Empty Trap "
* (1957) "A Man of Affairs "
* (1958) "The Deceivers"
* (1958) "Clemmie "
* (1958) "The Executioners "(reprinted as Cape Fear)
* (1958) "Soft Touch "
* (1959) "Deadly Welcome "
* (1959) "The Beach Girls "
* (1959) "Please Write for Details "
* (1959) "The Crossroads"
* (1960) "Slam the Big Door "
* (1960) "The Only Girl in the Game "
* (1960) "The End of the Night "
* (1961) "Where is Janice Gantry? "
* (1961) "One Monday We Killed Them All "
* (1962) "A Key to the Suite "
* (1962) "A Flash of Green "
* (1963) "I Could Go On Singing "(screenplay novelization)
* (1963) "On the Run"
* (1963) "The Drowner "
* (1966) "The Last One Left "
* (1977) "Condominium"
* (1984) "One More Sunday "
* (1986) "Barrier Island"Anthologies
* (1959) "
The Lethal Sex "
* (1978) "Other Times, Other Worlds "hort story collections
* (1966) "
End of the Tiger and Other Stories "
* (1971) "S*E*V*E*N "
* (1982) "The Good Old Stuff "
* (1983) "Two"
* (1984) "More Good Old Stuff "cience fiction
* (1951) "Wine of the Dreamers "(reprinted as Planet of the Dreamers)
* (1952) "Ballroom of the Skies " (novella )
* (1962) "The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything "Non-fiction
* (1965) "
The House Guests "
* (1968) "No Deadly Drug "
* (1981) "Nothing Can Go Wrong "(with Captain John H. Kilpack) [This is an account of the last voyage of one of the last American liners (the S.S. Mariposa, if memory serves) before it was sold to a foreign flag. MacDonald apparently wrote the whole book, collaborating with its captain for factual information.]
* (1986) ""
* (1987) "Reading for Survival " [http://www.librarything.com/work-info.php?book=20327772 LibraryThing]References
* Merrill, Hugh. "The Red Hot Typewriter: The Life and Times of John D. MacDonald". New York: St. Martin's Minotaur, 2000.
*External links
* [http://www.impossiblefunky.com/archives/issue_14/14_travismcgee.asp?IshNum=14&Headline=The%20Lonely%20Silver%20Screen Cashiers du Cinemart on Travis McGee Movies]
* [http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/manuscript/guides/Macdonald.htm John D. MacDonald Collection at University of Florida]
* [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24443-2003Nov10.html Jonathan Yardley on John D. MacDonald]
* [http://www.jdmhomepage.org An academic fansite of John D.]kool
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