- Fred Gipson
Frederick Benjamin Gipson (
February 7 ,1908 -August 14 ,1973 ) was an Americanauthor . He is best known for writing the 1956 novel "Old Yeller ", which became a popular 1957 Walt Disney film. Gipson was born on a farm near Mason in theTexas Hill Country , the son of Beck Gipson and the former Emma Deishler. After working at a variety offarming andranching jobs, he enrolled in 1933 at theUniversity of Texas at Austin . There he wrote for the "Daily Texan" and "The Ranger", but he left school before graduating to become a newspaper journalist.Writing
In the 1940s, Gipson began writing short stories with a western theme which proved to be prototypes for his longer works of fiction that followed. In 1946, his first full-length book, "The Fabulous Empire: Colonel Zack Miller's Story" was published. "Hound-Dog Man" in 1949 established Gipson's reputation when it became a Doubleday
Book-of-the-Month Club selection and sold over 250,000 copies in its first year of publication. His additional works included "The Home Place" (later filmed as "Return of the Texan", a 1962 Western starringDale Robertson andJoanne Dru ), "Big Bend: A Homesteader's Story", "Cowhand: The Story of a Working Cowboy", "The Trail-Driving Rooster" and "Recollection Creek".In 1956, his most famous novel "Old Yeller" was published, winning the
Newbery Honor . The novel achieved enduring popularity thanks to the 1957 Walt Disney Studios filmOld Yeller (1957 film) . "Old Yeller" has a sequel called "Savage Sam ", which also became a Walt Disney film in 1962. "Old Yeller" was the novel that Gipson considered his best work. Set in theTexas Hill Country in the 1860s just after theAmerican Civil War , the story is about the 14-year-old boy Travis Coates (played byTommy Kirk in the film) left in charge of the household while his father is away. Old Yeller, a straydog adopted by the boy, helps in the formidable task of protecting the family on the Texas Ranch.Awards and legacy
Gipson was the recipient of the
William Allen White Award , the firstSequoyah Book Award , theTelevision-Radio Annual Writers Award , and theNorthwest Pacific Award .According to one critic, Gipson "made the term 'Southwest literature' legitimate and meaningful" and "accomplished the rare but admirable feat of turning the bits and pieces of
folklore into myth." His novels were translated into Danish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Spanish, Swedish.External links
* [http://research.hrc.utexas.edu:8080/hrcxtf/view?docId=ead/00045.xml&query=gipson&query-join=and Fred Gipson Collection] at the
Harry Ransom Center at theUniversity of Texas at Austin
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.