Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Henry Morton Robinson

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Name
  
Henry Robinson

Children
  
Anthony Robinson

Movies
  
The Cardinal, Americana

Spouse
  
Gertrude Robinson

Role
  
Novelist


Henry Morton Robinson image1findagravecomphotos250photos201022766

Died
  
January 13, 1961, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
The cardinal, A Skeleton Key to Finnegan, Second Wisdom, John Erskine: a modern A, Water of Life: A Novel

Similar People
  
Otto Preminger, Tom Tryon, Joseph Campbell, John Huston, Robert Dozier

Henry Morton Robinson (September 7, 1898 – January 13, 1961) was an American novelist, best known for A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake written with Joseph Campbell and his 1950 novel The Cardinal, which Time magazine reported was "The year's most popular book, fiction or nonfiction."

Contents

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Biography

Robinson was born in Boston and graduated from Columbia College in 1923 after serving in the US Navy during the First World War.

He was an instructor in English at Columbia University, and a senior editor at Reader's Digest.

On December 23, 1960, he fell asleep in a hot bath after taking a sedative. Three weeks later, on January 13, 1961, he died in New York of complications from the resulting second- and third-degree burns.

He is buried in Artists Cemetery, Woodstock, Ulster County, New York. His son, Anthony Robinson, is also a noted novelist.

Career

His best-known novel The Cardinal details the life of Stephen Fermoyle, a young American priest who eventually becomes a Prince of the Church. The story is based in part on the life of Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York (1939–1967). The novel was adapted into an Academy Award-nominated film in 1963, directed by Otto Preminger and starring Tom Tryon.

Robinson also wrote The Perfect Round (1947). An excerpt from that novel was adapted into a screenplay by Richard Carr and put to film by David Carradine in a movie called Americana. The film won The People's Choice Award at the Director's Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival, in 1981. Audiences liked the film, but it was not well received by critics.

References

Henry Morton Robinson Wikipedia