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James Jones

 
 
Jones, James, 1921-77, American novelist, b. Robinson, Ill. Written in the tradition of naturalism, his novels often celebrate the endurance of man. From Here to Eternity (1951), his best-known work and the first of a trilogy, is a powerful story of army life in Hawaii immediately before the attack on Pearl Harbor; The Thin Red Line (1962) and Whistle (1978) complete the series. His other novels include Some Came Running (1957) and A Touch of Danger (1973). Viet Journal (1974) is an account of his trip to Vietnam.

Bibliography

See biography by F. MacShane (1985); study by J. R. Giles (1981).

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Works: Works by James Jones
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(1921-1977)

1951From Here to Eternity. Based on Jones's experiences in the Pacific with the U.S. Army during World War II, the novel provides a realistic account of army life in Hawaii on the eve of Pearl Harbor. Readers drawn both to the story and to Jones's liberal use of profane dialogue make the book an immediate bestseller.
1957Some Came Running. Jones's second novel is a nonmilitary follow-up to From Here to Eternity, concerning postwar life in a small Midwestern town. The book is a commercial success but a critical failure; reviewers object to its long-winded philosophizing. One reviewer calls it "a 1,200 page orgy of sex, self-pity, and sloppy prose."
1959The Pistol. Jones describes the book as "an experiment in writing a deliberately symbolic little novella." This return to a Pearl Harbor setting concerns an infantryman whose pistol becomes a symbol for his survival and others' envy.
1962The Thin Red Line. Jones provides an unglamorous look at warfare in a tale of Company C on Guadalcanal, where the author had fought and was wounded. Norman Mailer calls Jones's treatment of combat "so broad and true... that it could be used as a textbook at the Infantry School."
1967Go to the Widow-Maker. A successful playwright tests his manhood by learning to skin-dive and hunt sharks in this novel about masculinity, which mixes sex and undersea adventure with Freudian analysis. Jones's friend, William Styron, characterizes it as "a chaotic novel of immeasurable length, filled with plywood characters, implausible dialogue, and thick wedges of plain atrocious writing." It would be followed by The Merry Month of May (1971), in which an American family is torn apart by the 1968 Paris riots, and A Touch of Danger (1973), a detective story set on a Greek island.
1975WW II. In the last book the writer lived to complete, Jones supplies the text for a collection of 160 sketches and paintings of the war, describing combat from the viewpoint of the "evolution of a soldier." One of Jones's most effective works, it summarizes many of the themes of his novels.
1978Whistle. Jones's final novel (completed by Willie Morris) is the final volume of the author's World War II trilogy. It concerns infantry soldiers in a Tennessee army hospital and how the war has crippled them physically and psychologically.

Writer: James Jones
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  • Occupation: Writer, Actor
  • Active: '50s-'70s, '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: War, Drama
  • Career Highlights: From Here to Eternity, The Thin Red Line, The Longest Day
  • First Major Screen Credit: From Here to Eternity (1953)

Biography

One of the most influential novelists of the mid-20th century to deal with the subject of war -- and the men who fight them -- James Jones was something of a fixture in Hollywood as a source of great books. James Ramon Jones was born in Robinson, IL, in 1921, the son of Ramon Jones, a dentist, and the former Ada Blessing. The stock market crash in October 1929 destroyed the family's finances, and Ramon later sank into alcoholism, while Ada was crippled by diabetes. Seeing limited prospects in front of him and eager to separate himself from his family, James enlisted in the U.S. Army in June 1939 (as soon as he was out of high school) and was stationed in New York, Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone, and California, before he was transferred to the Army Air Corps in Hawaii. He did some boxing in the air corps, later transferred to the infantry, and was stationed at Schofield Barracks, just outside Honolulu. He was a regular participant in the libertine life led by most soldiers during that peaceful era in Hawaii, and it was in this period that he lived the life that he later attributed to Prewitt, Maggio, and others in his first book. He also discovered within himself a literary bent, beginning to visualize himself as an author after reading Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel.

Jones was present when Pearl Harbor was attacked and served in the defense of Hawaii; while awaiting reassignment to a combat area, he took some literature and writing courses at the University of Hawaii. In late 1942, he was shipped out for the Solomon Islands, and, in January 1943, participated in fighting on Guadalcanal. After being wounded in combat and killing one enemy soldier bare-handed, he received a serious leg injury that required surgery, from which he went through an extended period of recovery in San Francisco and Memphis. Jones' army record was marred by his going AWOL in late 1943 after he was denied leave and his request for a limited duty assignment was ignored. While he was away, the soldier met Harry E. Handy, an oil company executive, and his wife Lowney Handy, a frustrated writer. They took a liking to each other during their brief time together, but by the end of the year, Jones was back in the army, demoted to the lowest rank and job possible. In the late winter of 1944, he was suddenly promoted to sergeant, though by then was manifesting enough mental problems that he was sent to a psychiatric unit for observation. In the summer of that year, after being diagnosed with a psychoneurotic disorder, he was honorably discharged. He took up with the Handys again and began a very public romance with Lowney, which apparently didn't bother her husband. Jones later moved to New York (briefly attending New York University) and then to North Carolina before returning to live with the Handys in Robinson, IL, where he spent five years working on the book that became From Here to Eternity, receiving encouragement from two Scribners editors, Maxwell Perkins and Burroughs Mitchell. Meanwhile, Jones published his first short story, Temper of Steel, in Atlantic Monthly during 1948.

From Here to Eternity was finished in 1950 and published in 1951. The film rights were immediately bought for 87,000 dollars by Columbia Pictures, whose president, Harry Cohn, vowed to turn the 850-page book into a major movie, despite having to overcome such hurdles as a narrative that freely mentioned homosexuality, whorehouses, marital infidelity, and as much brutality as had ever been offered to the filmgoing public. A huge amount of Jones' experiences seemed bound up within the narrative, which was an uncompromising love/hate account of the army. The screenplay by Daniel Taradash kept the spirit of the book intact and the resulting film by Fred Zinnemann (starring Burt Lancaster, Deborah Kerr, Montgomery Clift, Frank Sinatra, and Donna Reed) was one the most honored and prestigious (and successful) ever issued by Columbia, winning eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture. It quickly took on a life of its own in popular culture, with the romantic tryst in the surf on the beach between Lancaster's Milt Warden and Kerr's Karen Holmes becoming one of the most suggestive and widely known (and parodied) love scenes of the decade. Sinatra's performance as Maggio rescued his acting career from oblivion, while Clift's cemented his reputation as one of the finest actors of his generation. Meanwhile, the novel sold more than four million copies and edged out J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye for the National Book Award.

Over the remainder of the 1950s, Jones split with Lowney Handy (with whom he had run a writer's retreat) in an acrimonious break-up and, with help from novelist Budd Schulberg, met and married actress Gloria Patricia Mosolino. Jones also finished and published his second novel, Some Came Running, the story of a returning ex-soldier who finds himself alienated from the pettiness and prejudices of his hometown. Although it was far longer than From Here to Eternity and got decidedly mixed reviews because of its length, the book became a bestseller and earned Jones 250,000 dollars for the film rights. Vincente Minnelli turned it into a very good movie starring Frank Sinatra, Shirley MacLaine, and Dean Martin. By the end of the '50s, Jones had moved to Paris (where he lived until 1974) with his wife and started a family. He published the short novel The Pistol in 1959 and later served as a consultant on Darryl F. Zanuck's production of The Longest Day. In 1962, Jones published his war novel The Thin Red Line, the follow-up to From Here to Eternity in what eventually became a World War II trilogy. Set amid the fighting on Guadalcanal, the story was filmed for the first time in 1964 by director Andrew Marton under auspices of Philip Yordan's Security Pictures, with Jack Warden (who had also been in From Here to Eternity) playing the role of Milt Warden and Keir Dullea as a sensitive recruit in his company. His next novel, Go to the Widow-Maker (1967), dealt with a favorite Jones hobby, skin diving, and male perceptions of sexual prowess. The one after that, The Merry Month of May, dealt with the student uprising in Paris in 1968 from the standpoint of expatriate American students. He also published a collection of short stories dealing with war and small-town life under the title The Ice-Cream Headache and Other Stories.

By this time, Jones occupied the front rank of popular American authors, with peers including Schulberg, Herman Wouk, and Irwin Shaw. From Here to Eternity remained a favorite among serious high school students and was studied in literature classes; Some Came Running and The Thin Red Line weren't far behind, though their film adaptations were less well-known. During the 1970s, however, he lost focus on his fiction. He moved his family back to the United States, which he found completely transformed from the country he'd known in the '50s. Some of these reactions were reflected in his mystery novel A Touch of Danger (1973), in which a 50-ish American private investigator takes a case that plunges him into murder, the drug trade, and hippies. He also became a war correspondent for The New York Times Magazine in Vietnam. His writing, embodied in Viet Journal (1974), reflected a bitter hatred of the war, the corruption of the South Vietnamese government, the savagery of the Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army regulars, and admiration for the American soldiers. Living on Long Island, he wrote the text for a war art book called WWII: A Chronicle of Soldiering (1975). Jones' health began to fail around this time, just as he was finishing his last war novel, Whistle. The writer was forced to dictate the last chapters that he finished, and the final four were completed from his notes and unedited writing by a longtime friend, Willie Morris. Published posthumously in 1978, it became a bestseller in hardcover as the final part of an epic story of World War II and the men who fought in it, drawing in two generations of readers who had known From Here to Eternity and The Thin Red Line.

In 1979, two years after Jones' death, a miniseries was made of From Here to Eternity. Directed by Buzz Kulik and starring William Devane, Natalie Wood, and Steve Railsback, it was sufficiently popular to generate a short-lived TV series. (There had also been an overt rip-off of the book entitled Pearl in 1978 starring Robert Wagner, Dennis Weaver, and Angie Dickinson on a rival network.) In 1998, The Thin Red Line was adapted to the big screen once again, this time by director Terrence Malick and starring Sean Penn in a star-studded, epic, 170-minute version. The release of that movie resulted in a new lease on life for the original novel, just as Zinnemann's From Here to Eternity periodically led viewers back to its source over the decades. The latter film had endured so well that it rated a 50th anniversary theatrical re-release in late 2003. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: James Jones (author)
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James Jones
James Ramon Jones
Born November 6, 1921(1921-11-06)
Robinson, Illinois
Died May 9, 1977 (aged 55)
Southampton, New York
Occupation Novelist, author
Nationality American
Writing period 1950-1977
Genres World War II fiction

James Ramon Jones (November 6, 1921May 9, 1977) was an American author known for his explorations of World War II and its aftermath.

Life

Jones was born and raised in Robinson, Illinois, the son of Ramon and Ada M. (née Blessing) Jones. He enlisted in the United States Army in 1939 and served in the 25th Infantry Division before and during World War II, first in Hawaii at Schofield Barracks on Oahu, then in combat on Guadalcanal, where he was wounded in action.

His wartime experiences inspired some of his most famous works. He witnessed the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which led to his first published novel, From Here to Eternity. The Thin Red Line reflected his combat experiences on Guadalcanal. His last novel, Whistle, was based on his hospital stay in Memphis, Tennessee, recovering from surgery on an ankle he had reinjured on the island.see "[James Jones on Guadalcanal]" by RJ Blaskiewicz, War Literature and the Arts [1]

His second published novel, Some Came Running, had its roots in his first attempted novel, which he called They Shall Inherit the Laughter, a thinly disguised autobiographical novel of his experiences in Robinson immediately after World War II. After several rejections for the work being too shrill and lacking perspective, Jones abandoned They Shall Inherit the Laughter and went to work writing From Here to Eternity, which won the National Book Award in 1952 and has been named one of the 100 best novels of the 20th century by the Modern Library. Conversely Some Came Running - albeit made into a critically acclaimed film starring Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Shirley MacLaine that was nominated for several Oscars - was savaged by the critics, who were especially harsh upon Jones' frequently misspelled words and punctuation errors throughout numerous passages of the book. Actually the critics had not realized that such elements were a conscious style choice by Jones to expound the provinciality of the novel's characters and setting. Jones apparently played around with this style with several short stories written at about the same time as Some Came Running (later incorporated into the collection The Ice-Cream Headache and Other Stories), only to abandon it altogether for the blunt but more grammatically sound style most associate with Jones by the time he finished The Thin Red Line in 1962.

Jones assisted in the formation of the Handy Writers' Colony in Marshall, Illinois, funded largely on the financial success of From Here To Eternity, and organized by his then-lover, Lowney Handy (Ms. Handy was still married at the time). Originally conceived as a Utopian commune where budding artists could focus exclusively on their writing projects, the colony dissolved after only a few years, largely in part because of Handy's own erratic behavior and Jones' focus on his own novels. The colony dissolved a few years after James Jones relocated to France following his marriage to Gloria Mosolino.

Jones would not live long enough to see the completion of his last novel, Whistle, (Jones knew he was dying of congestive heart failure while writing it). However, Jones did leave behind copious notes for Willie Morris to complete the final section of Whistle upon his death.

The posthumous publication of Whistle in 1978 saw the completion of Jones' war trilogy (the first parts being From Here to Eternity and The Thin Red Line), of which he wrote: "It will say just about everything I have ever had to say, or will ever have to say, on the human condition of war and what it means to us, as against what we claim it means to us."

Jones is the father of two children, including author Kaylie Jones, best known for writing A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries, a thinly veiled memoir of the Joneses living in Paris during the 1960s. Ms. Jones' novel was made into a film starring Kris Kristofferson, Barbara Hershey and Leelee Sobieski in 1998. The release of this film, along with the 1998 release of a new film version of The Thin Red Line, directed by Terrence Malick and produced by Robert Michael Geisler and John Roberdeau, sparked a revival of interest in James Jones' life and works.

Jones died in Southampton, New York of congestive heart failure and is buried in Poxabogue-Evergreen Cemetery, Bridgehampton, New York. His papers are now held at the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin.

His widow, Gloria, died on June 9, 2006.

Bibliography

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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