MacKinlay Kantor

MacKinlay Kantor

Kantor in 1950
Born Benjamin McKinlay Kantor
(1904-02-04)February 4, 1904
Webster City, Iowa, U.S.
Died October 11, 1977(1977-10-11) (aged 73)
Sarasota, Florida, U.S.
Nationality American
Notable works Andersonville (Pulitzer Prize)
Spouse Florence Irene Layne
Children Tim Kantor, Layne Kantor
Kantor playing the guitar

MacKinlay Kantor (February 4, 1904  October 11, 1977),[1] born Benjamin McKinlay Kantor, was an American journalist, novelist and screenwriter. He wrote more than 30 novels, several set during the American Civil War, and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1956 for his 1955 novel, Andersonville. He also wrote the novel Gettysburg, set during the Civil War.

Early life and education

Benjamin McKinlay Kantor was born and grew up in Webster City, Iowa, the second child and only son in his family. He had a sister Virginia. His mother, Effie (McKinlay) Kantor, worked as the editor of the Webster City Daily News during part of his childhood. His father, John Martin Kantor, was a native-born Swedish Jew descended from "a long line of rabbis, who posed as a Protestant clergyman".[2] His mother was of English, Irish, Scottish, and Pennsylvania Dutch ancestry.[3] (Later, MacKinlay Kantor wrote an unpublished novel called Half Jew.)[4] The boys were raised as Protestants. Kantor's father had trouble keeping jobs and abandoned the family before Benjamin was born. His mother returned to her parents in Webster City, Mr. and Mrs. Adam McKinlay, to live at their home with her children.[5]

As a child, the boy started using his middle name McKinlay as his given name. He changed its spelling, adding an "a", because he thought it sounded more Scottish, and chose to be called "Mack" or MacKinlay. He attended the local schools and made full use of the Kendall Young Public Library, which he described as his "university". Mack Kantor won a writing contest with his first story "Purple".[5]

Marriage and family

Kantor married Florence Irene Layne, and they had two children together. Their son Tim Kantor wrote a biography/memoir of his father,[4] titled My Father’s Voice: MacKinlay Kantor Long Remembered (1988).[6]

Career

Stories, journalism, and novels

From 1928 to 1934, Kantor wrote numerous stories for pulp fiction magazines, to earn a living and support his family; these works included crime stories and mysteries. He sold his first pulp stories, "Delivery Not Received" and "A Bad Night for Benny", to Edwin Baird, editor of Real Detective Tales and Mystery Stories. He also wrote for Detective Fiction Weekly.[4] In 1928, Kantor published his first novel, Diversey, set in Chicago, Illinois.

In 1932, Kantor moved with his family from the Midwest to New Jersey, in the New York metropolitan area.[4] He was an early resident of Free Acres, a social experimental community developed by activist Bolton Hall in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey.[7] In two years he sold 16 short stories and a serialized novel to Howard Bloomfield, editor of Detective Fiction Weekly. He also acquired a professional agent, Sydney Sanders.

Achieving some success by 1934, Kantor began to submit short stories to the "slick magazines" (glossies). His "Rogue's Gallery", published in Collier on August 24, 1935, became his most frequently reprinted story.

It was during this decade that Kantor first wrote about the American Civil War, beginning with his novel Long Remember (1934), set at the Battle of Gettysburg. As a boy and teenager in Iowa, Kantor had spent hours listening to the stories of Civil War veterans, and he was an avid collector of first-hand narratives.

During World War II, Kantor reported from London as a war correspondent for a Los Angeles newspaper. After flying with some bombing missions, he asked for and received training to operate the bomber's turret machine guns, although he was not in service and this violated regulations. Kantor interviewed numerous wounded troops, whose thoughts and ideas inspired a later novel of his.

When Kantor interviewed U.S. troops, many told him the only goal was to get home alive. He was reminded of the Protestant hymn: "When all my labors and trials are o'er / And I am safe on that beautiful shore [Heaven], O that will be / Glory for me!" Kantor returned from the European theater of war on military air transport (MAT). After the war, the producer Samuel Goldwyn commissioned him to write a screenplay about veterans' returning home.[8] Kantor wrote a novel in blank verse, which was published as Glory for Me (1945).[9] After selling the movie rights to his novel, Kantor was disappointed that the film was released under the title The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), and details of the story were changed by the screenwriter Robert Sherwood. Kantor was said to have lost his temper with Goldwyn and walked off the Hollywood lot. The first 15 seconds of the movie note that it is "based upon a novel by MacKinlay Kantor", but the novel's title was not given. It turned out, however, that his basic story had power as the film was a commercial and critical success, winning seven Academy Awards.

Beginning in 1948, Kantor arranged an intensive period of research with the New York City Police Department (NYCPD). He was the only civilian other than reporters allowed to ride with police on their beat. He often rode on night shifts, working with the 23rd Precinct, whose territory ranged from upper Park Avenue to East Harlem, comprising a wide range of residents and incomes. These experiences informed most of his short crime novels, as well as his major work Signal Thirty-Two, published in 1950 with jacket art by his wife Irene Layne Kantor.[4]

Kantor was noted for his limited use of punctuation within his literary compositions. He was known for a lack of quotation marks and was influential in this regard on Cormac McCarthy, who said to Oprah that Kantor was the first writer he encountered who left them out.[10] Kantor was one of three primary influences on McCarthy's adopting his unique style.[11]

During his assignment with the U.S. troops in World War II, Kantor entered the Buchenwald concentration camp as they liberated it on April 14, 1945. During the next decade, his experience would inform his research for and writing of Andersonville (1955), his novel about the Confederate prisoner of war camp. One of the issues he struggled with in Germany and afterward was how to think of the civilians who lived near Buchenwald. As he struggled to understand, he developed ideas which he expressed in his novel, where he portrayed some civilian Southerners sympathetically, in contrast to officers at the camp.[12] He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1956 for Andersonville (1955).

In writing more than 30 novels, Kantor often returned to the theme of the American Civil War. Kantor wrote two works for young readers set in the Civil War years: Lee and Grant at Appomattox (1950) and Gettysburg (1952).

In the November 22, 1960, issue of Look magazine, Kantor published a fictional account set as a history text, entitled If the South Had Won the Civil War. This generated such a response that it was published in 1961 as a book. It is one of many alternate histories of that war.

Kantor's last novel was Valley Forge (1975).[1]

Films

In addition to journalism and novels, Kantor wrote the screenplay for Gun Crazy (aka Deadly Is the Female) (1950), a noted film noir. It was based on his short story by the same name, published February 3, 1940 in The Saturday Evening Post (a glossy). Moreover, several of his novels were adapted for films.

In 1992, it was revealed that he had allowed his name to be used on a screenplay written by Dalton Trumbo,[4] one of the Hollywood Ten, who had been blacklisted as a result of his refusal to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) hearings. Kantor passed his payment on to Trumbo to help him survive.

Kantor acted in the film Wind Across the Everglades (1958).

Publishing

He established his own publishing house, and published several of his works in the 1930s and 1940s.

Death

Kantor died of a heart attack in 1977, aged 73, at his home in Sarasota, Florida.[1]

Bibliography

Novels

Collections

Children's and young-adult books

Nonfiction

Highly anthologised stories

Filmography

Films
Television

Legacy and honors

References

  1. 1 2 3 Kidd, Robin L. (2001). "MacKinlay Kantor". In Greasley, Philip A. Dictionary of Midwestern Literature. Volume One: The Authors. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. p. 251. ISBN 0-253-33609-0. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
  2. "Review of Tim Kantor, 'My Father's Voice: MacKinlay Kantor Long Remembered'". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved October 17, 2010.
  3. Michael Shaara (1994). Three Great Novels of the Civil War. Wings Books.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Apostolou, John (Spring 1997). "MacKinlay Kantor". The Armchair Detective. Retrieved October 17, 2010. republished on Mystery File
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Nass, Martin E. (October 29, 1999). "MacKinlay Kantor - Pulitzer Prize Winner" (Archived at the website of Martin E. "Ed" Nass). Daily Freeman-Journal, Millennium Edition. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
  6. Kantor, Tim (1988). My Father’s Voice: MacKinlay Kantor Long Remembered. ISBN 9780070332768.
  7. Buchan, Perdita (February 7, 2008). "Utopia, NJ". New Jersey Monthly. Retrieved February 27, 2011. "Free Acres had some famous residents in those heady early days: actors James Cagney and Jersey City–born Victor Kilian, writers Thorne Smith (Topper) and MacKinlay Kantor (Andersonville), and anarchist Harry Kelly, who helped found the Ferrer Modern School, centerpiece of the anarchist colony at Stelton in present-day Piscataway."
  8. Orriss, Bruce (1984). When Hollywood Ruled the Skies: The Aviation Film Classics of World War II. Hawthorn, California: Aero Associates Inc. p. 119.
  9. Levy, Emmanuel (c. 2008). "Best Years of Our Lives, The (1946)" (review). Emmanuel Levy: Cinema 24/7. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
  10. "Cormac McCarthy's Three Punctuation Rules, and How They All Go Back to James Joyce". Retrieved 2015-09-29.
  11. McCarthy, Cormac (2007). "interview". The Oprah Winfrey Show. Retrieved 2008-11-13.
  12. Smithpeters, Jeffrey Neal (2005). ""To the Latest Generation": Cold War and Post Cold War U.S. Civil War Novels in Their Social Context" (PhD. Dissertation, Louisiana State University). pp. 14–15. Retrieved June 27, 2010.

Further reading

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