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Edison Marshall

Edison Tesla Marshall (August 28, 1894 – October 29, 1967) was an American author of short stories and novels.

Life

Marshall was born on August 28, 1894, in Rensselaer, Indiana. He grew up in Medford, Oregon, and attended the University of Oregon from 1913 to 1916. He served in the U.S. Army with the rank of second lieutenant. His 1917 World War I draft registration card indicated he was a "professional writer" employed by The American Magazine and The Saturday Evening Post, and that he was missing his thumb on his left hand. He married Agnes Sharp Flythe; they had two children, Edison and Nancy. In 1926, they moved to Augusta, Georgia. Marshall mainly wrote historical fiction. He also wrote some science fiction about lost civilizations.

For some of his work, he used the pseudonym Hall Hunter.

His novel Benjamin Blake was adapted into a movie in 1942, Son of Fury, featuring Tyrone Power. Yankee Pasha-The Adventures of Jason Starbuck was adapted into the movie Yankee Pasha, featuring Jeff Chandler and Mamie Van Doren in 1954, as was The Vikings, featuring Kirk Douglas, in 1958.

He had a Gold Cross, Order of Merit from the University of Miami.

A life-long hunter, he stalked big game in Canada, Alaska, Africa, Indo-China, and India. He described his hunting experiences in The Heart of the Hunter, copyrighted in 1956. (A high school hunting accident cost him his thumb).

He died on October 29, 1967, in Augusta, Georgia.

Awards

Works

  • (reprinted 1950 as Trail's End, Popular Library)
  • (reprinted 1950 as Riders of the Smoky Land)
  • (reprinted 1972 as The Lost Land)

He had also worked on Parole, Inc. (1948), a film noir, as a dialog director.

Stories

References

External links