John MacDonald
from Writer's Almanac :
It’s the birthday of mystery novelist John D. MacDonald, born in Sharon, Pennsylvania (1916). He’s famous for his novels featuring Travis McGee, a beach-bum detective who lives on a houseboat that he won in a poker game.
MacDonald started reading when he was a kid, after he almost died of scarlet fever. He spent a year in bed. He read all the books in the library. He served in the Army during World War II, and he entertained his wife by writing her little stories in his letters, one of which she liked so much that she typed it up and sent it to the magazine Story, where it was published.
John D. MacDonald had four months of severance pay when he came home from the Army, and he spent those four months writing seven days a week, 14 hours a day. By the end of the year, he was making a living selling short stories to pulp fiction magazines.
He used his mystery novels to criticize what he called American junk culture: fast food, bad TV, and suburban development. He said, “I am wary of a lot of things, such as [...] time clocks, newspapers, mortgages, sermons, miracle fabrics, deodorants [...] pageants, progress, and manifest destiny.”
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