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Owen Johnson (writer)

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Name
  
Owen Johnson

Role
  
Writer

Owen Johnson (writer) image1findagravecomphotos250photos200836532
Died
  
January 27, 1952, Vineyard Haven, Tisbury, Massachusetts, United States

Movies
  
The Varmint, Children of Divorce, The Enemy Sex, Virtuous Wives, The Woman Gives

Spouse
  
Gertrude Bovee Mackay Le Boutillie (m. 1926–1952)

Parents
  
Robert Underwood Johnson, Katherine Mcmahon Johnson

Books
  
Stover at Yale, The Salamander, The Varmint: A Lawrence, The Prodigious Hickey: A, Murder in Any Degree

Similar People
  
Cobina Wright, Robert Underwood Johnson, James Cruze, Adela Rogers St Johns, William Desmond Taylor

Owen McMahon Johnson (August 27, 1878 – January 27, 1952) was an American writer best remembered for his stories and novels cataloguing the educational and personal growth of the fictional character Dink Stover. The "Lawrenceville Stories" (The Prodigious Hickey, The Tennessee Shad, The Varmint, Skippy Bedelle, The Hummingbird), set in the well-known prep school, invite comparison with Kipling's Stalky and Co. A 1987 PBS mini-series was based on them.

Contents

Biography

He was born in New York City, the son of Robert Underwood Johnson and his wife Katharine, nee McMahon, and attended Lawrenceville School, founding and editing the Lawrenceville Literary Magazine, known as The Lit. He attended Yale University, as a member of the Class of 1900, graduating in 1901, marrying Mary Galt Stockly and moving to Paris, where he did his initial writing. He was a war correspondent for the New York Times and Collier's during World War I.

His first wife died in 1910. His second wife was Esther Ellen Cobb (better known as Cobina Wright Jr.), whom he married in 1912 and divorced in 1917. His third wife was Cecile Denise de la Garde, who died in 1918. His fourth wife was Catherine Sayre Burton, who died in 1923. His fifth wife was Gertrude Bovee Le Boutillier. He was the father of five children.

Johnson worked and resided in Stockbridge, Massachusetts from 1923 to 1948, writing about marriage, divorce, and golf. After 1931, his writing activities became less intense, and he became interested in politics, running (unsuccessfully) for the House of Representatives in 1936 and 1938.

He died at his home in Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts, where he had lived for five years.

Writings

  • Arrows of the Almighty (1901).
  • In the Name of Liberty (1905).
  • Max Fargus (1906).
  • The Eternal Boy (1909; a 'Lawrenceville' story).
  • The Prodigious Hickey (1910; a reissue of The Eternal Boy).
  • The Humming Bird (1910; also one of the 'Lawrenceville' stories).
  • The Varmint (1910; introducing Dink Stover at Lawrenceville).
  • The Tennessee Shad (1911; a 'Lawrenceville' story).
  • Stover at Yale (1912).
  • Murder in Any Degree (1913; stories).
  • The Sixty-first Second (1913; a novel concerning the Panic of 1907).
  • The Salamander (1913).
  • Making Money (1915).
  • The Woman Gives (1915).
  • The Spirit of France (1916; nonfiction).
  • Virtuous Wives (1918).
  • The Wasted Generation (1921).
  • Skippy Bedelle (1922; also one of the 'Lawrenceville' stories).
  • Blue Blood (1923).
  • Children of Divorce (1927).
  • Sacrifice (1929).
  • The Coming of the Amazons (1931).
  • Films

    Several films are based upon Johnson novels, including The Varmint (1917), Virtuous Wives (1918), The Woman Gives (1920), The Enemy Sex (1924) (based on The Salamander), and Children of Divorce (1927), The Happy Years (1950) starring Dean Stockwell and Leo G. Carroll.

    References

    Owen Johnson (writer) Wikipedia