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Jack D Hunter

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Name
  
Jack Hunter

Role
  
Author

Movies
  
The Blue Max


Jack D. Hunter wwwjackhuntercomJack2007JPG

Died
  
April 13, 2009, St. Augustine, Florida, United States

Spouse
  
Shirley Thompson (m. 1944–2006)

Children
  
Jack Hunter Jr., Lyn Hunter Cannon, Jill Hunter, Lee Hunter Higgins

Books
  
The Blue Max, The Expendable Spy, The Blood Order, Sweeney's run, The tin cravat

Similar People
  
Gerald Hanley, Basilio Franchina, Ben Barzman, Jeremy Kemp, John Guillermin

Jack D. Hunter: Literary Legend


Jack Dayton Hunter (June 4, 1921 – April 13, 2009) was an American author and artist, best known for his novel, The Blue Max, which was made into a film of the same name.

Contents

Biography

Hunter was born in Hamilton, Ohio, on June 4, 1921, the son of Whitney G. and Irene Dayton Hunter. Ironically, while his father, whose long career with the DuPont Company began as a paint color evaluator because of his sensitivity to colors, Hunter was red-green blind. He graduated with a BA in journalism from Penn State University in 1943.

Because he spoke German, having taught himself and then studied it in college, Hunter was sent to Germany just after the war ended.

"Operation Nursery," including Jack Hunter's role in it, forms the basis of the nonfiction book The Axmann Conspiracy: The Nazi Plan for a Fourth Reich and How the U.S. Army Defeated It, Berkley Books (Penguin), Sept. 2012.

After the war, he worked in various journalistic capacities, as a public relations executive for Du Pont, and as a speech writer in Washington D.C..

His first novel was The Blue Max. Hunter, who dabbled in water colors, volunteered to provide a cover image for the book himself.

Hunter was the author of 17 novels, including The Ace, published in 2008. Like The Blue Max, The Ace deals with World War I aviation, but focuses on the human costs and chaotic conditions that bedeviled the Americans in their need to build a world-class air force virtually overnight.

During the 1980s, Hunter served as the writing coach for reporters working at the (now defunct) Jacksonville Journal, the Florida Times-Union, which still publishes in Jacksonville, and the St. Augustine Record, which still publishes in St. Augustine. In this role, which continued three days a week for 10 years, Hunter provided encouragement, tutelage and support to hundreds of journalists, some of whom went on to work at The New York Times, The Denver Post, The Miami Herald and in many other venues.

He lived in St. Augustine, Florida, until he died at age 87 on April 13, 2009. He was interred at the Jacksonville National Cemetery.

References

Jack D. Hunter Wikipedia