Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Duncan Norton Taylor

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Cause of death
  
stroke

Spouse(s)
  
Margaret Scott

Occupation
  
journalist, editor

Name
  
Duncan Norton-Taylor


Years active
  
1939-1965

Role
  
Journalist

Employer
  
Education
  
Children
  
Susan Norton-Taylor May, Nancy Norton-Taylor Tomson, Joan Norton-Taylor

Died
  
September 13, 1982, Easton, Maryland, United States

Residence
  
Oxford, Maryland, United States

Books
  
With My Heart in My Mouth, God's Man: A Novel on the Life of John Calvin, The Celts

Similar People
  
Mark Halperin, Otto Fuerbringer, Adi Ignatius, TS Mathews, Richard Stengel

Duncan Norton-Taylor was an American journalist who was a senior editor at Time magazine and managing editor at Fortune magazine from the 1940s through the 1960s.

Contents

Background

Norton-Taylor graduated Brown University, where he worked at The Brown Jug.

Career

Upon graduating, Norton-Taylor began work as a newspaper reporter.

He joined Time as a writer in 1939, the same year as his long-time colleague and friend, Whittaker Chambers. In 1940, William Saroyan lists him among "contributing editors" at Time in the play, Love's Old Sweet Song. Norton-Taylor and Chambers both rose to become senior editors.

In 1951, Norton-Taylor became an editor at Fortune. In 1959, he became Fortune's managing editor.In 1965, he stepped down and joined Fortune's board of editors.

In 2012, Fortune republished an article by Norton-Taylor called "How Top Executives Live" from 1955.

Personal

Norton-Taylor married Margaret Scott. They had three daughters: Susan Norton-Taylor May, Nancy Norton-Taylor Tomson, and Joan Norton-Taylor. He lived in Oxford, Maryland in retirement from 1967 onwards. He died on Monday, September 13, 1982, at Memorial Hospital in nearby Easton, Maryland, after a stroke, aged 78. Surviving him were his wife, daughters, and nine grandchildren.

(His great-grandson, Scott Laudati, is the author of "Hawaiian Shirts In The Electric Chair", a book of poetry published in 2014 by Kuboa Press.)

Works

Norton-Taylor wrote and edited more than half a dozen books.

Books written

  • With My Heart in My Mouth (1944)
  • I Went to See for Myself (1945)
  • God's Man: A Novel on the Life of John Calvin (1979)
  • Books edited

  • Cold Friday by Whittaker Chambers, edited and with an introduction by Duncan Norton-Taylor (1964)
  • The Celts, Duncan Norton-Taylor and the editors of Time-Life Books (1974)
  • For Some, the Dream Came True: The Best from 50 years of Fortune Magazine, selected and edited by Duncan Norton-Taylor (1981)
  • Adaptations

  • Beautiful but Young: A Contest Selection by Olive White Fortenbacher, arranged from Duncan Norton-Taylor's story of the same name (1932)
  • References

    Duncan Norton-Taylor Wikipedia


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