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Edison Marshall
Edison Marshall
from Wikipedia
Marshall's 1923 novel Dian of the Lost Land was reprinted as the cover story on the April 1949 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries

Key Information

Edison Tesla Marshall (August 28, 1894 – October 29, 1967) was an American short story writer and novelist.

Life

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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.[1] He married Agnes Sharp Flythe; they had two children, Edison and Nancy.[2] In 1926, they moved to Augusta, Georgia.[3] Marshall mainly wrote historical fiction. He also wrote some science fiction about lost civilizations.[4]

For some of his work, he used the pseudonym Hall Hunter.[5][2]

His novel Benjamin Blake was adapted into a film in 1942, Son of Fury, starring Tyrone Power. Yankee Pasha-The Adventures of Jason Starbuck was adapted into the film Yankee Pasha, starring Jeff Chandler and Mamie Van Doren in 1954, as was The Vikings, starring Kirk Douglas, in 1958.[6][7][8][9][10]

He held the Gold Cross, Order of Merit from the University of Miami.[11]

A life-long hunter, he stalked big game in Canada, Alaska, Africa, Indo-China, and India.[4] A high school hunting accident cost him his thumb. He described his hunting experiences in The Heart of the Hunter, copyrighted in 1956.

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

Awards

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Works

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Marshall's 1934 novel Ogden's Strange Story was reprinted as the cover story on the December 1949 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries
  • The Voice of the Pack. Little, Brown, and Company. 1920.
  • The Snowshoe Trail. A. L. Burt. 1921.
  • The Strength of the Pines. Little, Brown. 1921. (reprinted 1950 as Trail's End, Popular Library)
  • Shepherds of the Wild . Little, Brown and Company. 1922. (reprinted 1950 as Riders of the Smoky Land)
  • The Skyline of Spruce. Little, Brown, and Company. 1922.
  • The Land of Forgotten Men. A. L. Burt. 1923. (reprinted 1972 as The Lost Land)
  • Seward's Folly. Little, Brown and Company. 1924.
  • Love Stories of India. Farrar, Straus. 1933.
  • Ogden's Strange Story. H. C. Kinsey & Company, Inc. 1934.
  • Dian of the Lost Land. H. C. Kinsey & Company, Inc. 1935.
  • The Stolen God. Philadelphia Inquirer Public Ledger. 1937.
  • The Doctor of Lonesome River. Triangle Books. 1938.
  • The Jewel of Mahabar. H. C. Kinsey & Company, Inc. 1938.
  • Benjamin Blake. Farrar, Straus. 1941.
  • Great Smith. Farrar & Rinehart. 1943.
  • Yankee Pasha-The Adventures of Jason Starbuck. Farrar, Straus. 1947.
  • Gypsy Sixpence. Farrar, Straus. 1949.
  • The Upstart. Dell. 1950.
  • The Infinite Woman. Farrar, Straus. 1950.
  • Castle in the Swamp: A Tale of Old Carolina. Farrar, Straus. 1948.
  • The Viking. Farrar, Straus, and Young. 1951.
  • Caravan to Xanadu: a Novel of Marco Polo. Farrar, Straus and Young. 1951.
  • Bengal Tiger: a Tale of India. Doubleday. 1952.
  • American Captain. Farrar, Straus & Young. 1954.
  • The Gentleman. Farrar, Straus & Cudahy. 1956.
  • The Pagan King. Doubleday. 1959.
  • Earth Giant. Doubleday. 1960.
  • West with the Vikings. Doubleday. 1961.
  • The Conqueror. Doubleday. 1962.
  • Cortez and Marina. Doubleday. 1963.
  • The Lost Colony. Doubleday. 1964.

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

Stories

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Edison Marshall is an American novelist and short story writer known for his prolific career producing adventure fiction and historical novels that achieved widespread popularity through magazine serialization and book sales in the first half of the 20th century. His stories frequently drew inspiration from his own big-game hunting expeditions across Africa, Alaska, Asia, and other remote regions, blending themes of exploration, survival, and exotic locales into commercially successful narratives. Born Edison Tesla Marshall on August 28, 1894, in Rensselaer, Indiana, he moved to Oregon as a teenager and attended the University of Oregon, where he majored in journalism and sold his first short story to Argosy magazine while still a student. After serving as a public-relations officer in the United States Army during World War I, he married Agnes Sharp Flythe in 1920 and settled in Augusta, Georgia, which became his lifelong home and the base for his full-time writing career. There, surrounded by trophies from his global hunts, he pursued his goal of earning a living solely through writing, producing nearly fifty novels and hundreds of short stories and articles for prominent publications such as Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, and Reader’s Digest. Marshall gained early recognition when his short story “The Heart of Little Shikara” received the O. Henry Memorial Award as the best short story of 1921. His career peaked in the 1940s and 1950s with a shift toward historical novels, including best-sellers like Benjamin Blake, which was adapted into the film Son of Fury. Several other works were adapted for the screen, contributing to his reputation as a leading popular storyteller of his era whose books were translated into multiple languages and frequently appeared on best-seller lists. He received honors including an Order of Merit from the University of Miami for distinguished leadership in fiction and continued writing until his death in Augusta on October 30, 1967.

Early Life and Education

Birth and Childhood

Edison Tesla Marshall was born on August 28, 1894, in Rensselaer, Indiana. His father, George Edward Marshall, published a daily newspaper in the town and had previously studied law and taught school. Marshall spent his early years in northern Indiana, where as a boy he hunted and fished around his home. In 1907, at the age of thirteen, his father retired from the newspaper business, sold the publication, and moved the family to Medford, Oregon, to pursue fruit growing in the Rogue River Valley amid the region's orchard boom. The family settled in what is now the South Oakdale Historic District in Medford. This relocation from the Midwest to southern Oregon's scenic and rugged landscapes exposed Marshall to the natural beauty and outdoor environments of the American West during his adolescence. Growing up in Medford, he had access to his father's library of classic literature, which nurtured his early intellectual interests amid the Western setting that would later inform his adventure-focused worldview.

University Years and Early Writing

Edison Marshall attended the University of Oregon from 1913 to 1916 following his high school graduation in Medford. While a student, he sold his first short story to Argosy magazine, an achievement that instilled in him the confidence to pursue writing as a career. This early professional sale marked the beginning of his writing efforts while still enrolled at the university, where he began developing his skills in fiction amid his studies. Some biographical records also indicate that he majored in journalism during this period, which aligned with his growing interest in literary work. Marshall left the University of Oregon in 1916 without completing a degree, after which he increasingly focused on building his writing career, though his progress was later interrupted by military service during World War I.

Literary Career

Magazine Contributions and Short Stories

Edison Marshall launched his professional writing career with short story sales to magazines during his university years at the University of Oregon. His first published story, "When the Fire Dies," appeared in The Argosy while he was a freshman. By age twenty-one, he had placed another story in The Saturday Evening Post. In the 1910s and 1920s, Marshall became a prolific contributor to pulp magazines, particularly those specializing in adventure fiction such as Argosy and Blue Book Magazine. His stories typically featured thrilling narratives of exploration, hunting, exotic locales, and human endurance, with occasional forays into weird or speculative elements like lost races or alternate worlds. Notable early works include "Who Is Charles Avison?" published in Argosy in April 1916, which employed an early version of the Counter-Earth concept, and "The Serpent City" in Blue Book Magazine (November 1919), a lost-race tale later reprinted in Weird Tales. Other pulp-era stories from 1919 included "The Flying Lion" and "The Son of the Wild Things," also in Blue Book Magazine. Several of Marshall's short stories achieved significant recognition and broad readership. "The Elephant Remembers" (1919) proved especially popular, earning inclusion in school textbooks and wide circulation. His 1921 story "Heart of Little Shikara" was selected by the O. Henry Memorial Commission as the best American short story of the year. By the 1920s and 1930s, Marshall expanded to higher-paying "slick" magazines, contributing numerous short stories and serials to publications such as The Saturday Evening Post (where he placed scores of pieces), Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, Liberty, and Field and Stream. These outlets brought his work to millions of readers and generated substantial income during the two decades before he transitioned primarily to historical novels in the early 1940s.

Novels and Commercial Success

Edison Marshall began his career as a novelist in the early 1920s after establishing himself through magazine short stories, with his first novel, The Voice of the Pack, appearing in 1920. His fiction frequently explored themes of adventure, wilderness survival, exploration, and later historical events, blending action with vivid settings that appealed to a broad readership. Over the course of his career, Marshall published 49 novels, maintaining a prolific output of nearly one book per year. Early works such as The Snowshoe Trail (1921), The Strength of the Pines (1921), and Shepherds of the Wild (1922) focused on outdoor adventures and rugged landscapes, building on the thematic foundations of his short fiction. Marshall achieved his greatest commercial success in the 1940s and 1950s with historical adventure novels, during which period he became one of the most reliable fixtures on popular book lists. Benjamin Blake (1941) marked a major turning point, becoming an immediate best-seller in the United States and several European countries. Yankee Pasha (1947) represented his biggest bestseller up to that point and further solidified his status as a leading writer of historical fiction. Other commercially successful titles from this era include Caravan to Xanadu (1951), The Viking (1951), The Pagan King (1959), and Earth Giant (1960), which drew on real historical figures and events to deliver swashbuckling narratives. He was a perennial presence on U.S. best-seller lists from the 1920s through the 1950s, sustaining a forty-year run of popularity and financial success. Marshall candidly described his professional motivation in terms of pursuing both recognition and prosperity: “I went after the two big prizes, fame and fortune, and I got them both.” His approach was characterized by a commitment to accessibility, as he wrote primarily to be read, with most of his books achieving best-seller status.

Film Adaptations

Silent Film Era Adaptations

Several of Edison Marshall's adventure novels and stories from the early 1920s were adapted into silent feature films, reflecting the era's appetite for wilderness tales and outdoor drama. The Snowshoe Trail (1922) was the first such adaptation, drawn directly from his 1921 novel of the same name. That same year, Strength of the Pines (1922) reached theaters as an adaptation of another of his novels. In 1923, Shadows of the North was produced, based on Marshall's novel The Skyline of Spruce. The Isle of Retribution followed in 1926, adapted from his 1923 novel of the same title. The final silent-era adaptation was The Far Call in 1929, derived from one of his short stories. Marshall had no involvement in screenwriting, direction, or production for any of these films, serving solely as the original author of the source material. These early adaptations helped introduce his themes of rugged frontier life and personal retribution to a broader cinematic audience.

Mid-Century Hollywood Adaptations

Several of Edison Marshall's novels from the 1940s and early 1950s were adapted into major Hollywood productions during the sound era, capitalizing on the popularity of adventure and historical epics featuring prominent stars. Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake (1942) was adapted from Marshall's novel Benjamin Blake (1941), with Tyrone Power starring as the protagonist seeking his rightful inheritance and revenge in an 18th-century setting that spans England and the South Seas. Directed by John Cromwell, the film emphasized swashbuckling action and romance, though it took some liberties with the source material's plot to suit cinematic pacing. In the 1950s, Marshall's tales of exotic adventure continued to draw Hollywood attention. Yankee Pasha (1954), based on Marshall's 1947 novel Yankee Pasha – The Adventures of Jason Starbuck, starred Jeff Chandler as a Massachusetts sailor captured by Barbary pirates and thrust into intrigue in North Africa, with Rhonda Fleming and Mamie Van Doren in supporting roles. The adaptation retained the novel's core premise of cultural clash and high-seas peril while incorporating elements typical of 1950s Technicolor adventure films. The Vikings (1958) adapted Marshall's novel The Viking (1951), with Kirk Douglas leading as Einar, a Norse warrior involved in raids and rivalries, alongside Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh. Directed by Richard Fleischer, the production highlighted spectacular sea battles and Viking culture, though it altered aspects of the original narrative to emphasize dramatic conflict and visual spectacle. These adaptations demonstrated ongoing commercial interest in Marshall's work, with studios selecting his stories for their potential to deliver exotic locales, action, and star appeal, though the films often modified plots to fit Hollywood conventions of the time. Marshall did not participate in scripting or production for any of these projects.

Adventures and Personal Interests

Big-Game Hunting and Expeditions

Edison Marshall was an enthusiastic big-game hunter who undertook numerous expeditions across three continents, primarily in the 1920s through 1940s, seeking both adventure and authentic material for his writing. His hunts took him to remote regions including India and Indochina in Asia, various parts of Africa, and the Alaskan and Canadian Arctic in North America, where he pursued dangerous game with high-powered rifles rather than relying on photographic safaris. Trophies from these expeditions, including specimens from tiger, leopard, and water buffalo hunts, adorned his home in Augusta, Georgia. Among his notable experiences was tiger hunting in southern Asia, particularly India, where he described the intense thrill of baiting with tethered heifers, waiting through jungle nights, and facing charging wounded tigers in split-second encounters. In French Indochina, he pursued giant sladang, while in Africa he targeted rogue elephants and, during a Kenyan safari, hunted with the renowned professional hunter Charles "Bwana" Cottar, taking lion, leopard, and other species. In the North American Arctic and Alaskan regions, he collected Kodiak bears, grizzlies, caribou, and moose, rounding out a diverse list of trophies that also included rhino, gaur, and sambar from Asian hunts. Marshall documented these real-life adventures in two nonfiction works: Shikar and Safari: Reminiscences of Jungle Hunting (1947), a collection of previously published magazine stories with added commentary, and The Heart of the Hunter (1956), which chronicled his progression from early small-game pursuits in Indiana to global big-game expeditions. These expeditions directly informed the adventure themes in his fiction, providing vivid, firsthand settings and experiences that paralleled the high-stakes hunts and exotic locales in many of his novels.

Travel and Outdoor Experiences

Edison Marshall cultivated a reputation as a world-traveling adventurer who undertook extensive international journeys primarily to gather authentic material for his stories. He visited diverse regions across the globe, including Indochina—where he was photographed in September 1931—as well as areas in Africa, Alaska, China, and India. These travels shaped the settings and themes of many of his novels, which frequently drew on exotic and historical locales inspired by the places he experienced firsthand. Marshall's broader outdoor lifestyle reinforced his identity as an author who embodied the spirit of exploration and adventure central to his fiction, with travels forming a key part of his creative process.

Personal Life

Family and Residences

Edison Marshall married Agnes Sharp Flythe on January 4, 1920, after meeting her while he was stationed at Camp Hancock in Augusta, Georgia, during his World War I service as a public-relations officer in the U.S. Army. The couple had two children: a son, Edison T. Marshall Jr., and a daughter, Nancy Silence Marshall. Early in their marriage, they resided in Medford, Oregon, near Marshall's family home. In 1926, they relocated to Augusta, Georgia, where they made their permanent home for the rest of Marshall's life. In Augusta, the Marshalls owned multiple mansions, including Breetholm—a residence on Milledge Road near the Augusta Country Club that they named after an estate in one of his novels—where they entertained frequently, hosting publishers, civic leaders, and military figures. Their time in Augusta was occasionally interrupted by Marshall's big-game hunting expeditions abroad, but the city remained the family's primary base.

Later Years and Death

Life in Augusta and Final Works

Edison Marshall spent his later years in Augusta, Georgia, where he had established residence decades earlier after his military service and marriage, making the city his primary home for the remainder of his life. He owned multiple properties in the Augusta area, including one acquired in 1945 that had been originally built in 1908, as well as a residence in nearby North Augusta. In these final decades, Marshall continued his prolific writing career, producing novels that reflected his enduring interest in adventure and historical themes. His later publications included Earth Giant in 1960 and The Lost Colony in 1964, the latter a historical novel exploring early American themes. He remained a recognized literary figure in Augusta until his death in 1967, with one of his last interviews offering reflections on his long career.

Death and Immediate Aftermath

Edison Marshall died on October 29, 1967, at his home in Augusta, Georgia, at the age of 73. The death occurred in his longtime residence in Augusta and was reported the next day through an Associated Press dispatch. No cause of death was specified in contemporary accounts. His passing received notice in national and local publications. The New York Times published an obituary that identified him as the author of historical novels including Yankee Pasha, The Viking, and Benjamin Blake. In Augusta, the local newspaper published an editorial shortly afterward praising his hospitality and patriotism.
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