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Robert Cantwell

 
Works: Works by Robert Cantwell
(1908-1978)

1931Laugh and Lie Down. The proletarian novelist's first book concerns the aimless lives of inhabitants of a Washington mill town. Cantwell grew up in Washington and worked for a time in a lumber mill. He would become an editor for Time and Newsweek.
1934The Land of Plenty. Cantwell's second novel is a powerful proletarian social drama concerning the impact of a strike at a Pacific Northwest lumber mill.

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Robert Emmett Cantwell (January 31, 1908 in Little Falls, Washington –December 8, 1978) was a novelist and critic. His most notable work, The Land of Plenty, focuses on a lumber mill in a thinly disguised version of his hometown of Aberdeen, Washington.

He attended the University of Washington (1924-1925), then spent the next four years working at Harbor Plywood Co., (1925-1929) Hoquiam, Washington. In 1929, after selling a short story to The American Caravan, he moved to New York where he started work on his first novel, Laugh and Lie Down (1931). From 1930 to 1935 he wrote a second novel, The Land of Plenty (1934) and began work on a biography of Bostonian E. A. Filene, in collaboration with Lincoln Steffens. This work was never completed.

Cantwell then worked on the editorial staffs of Time (1935-1936) and Fortune (1937), then became associate editor of Time (1938-1945). Cantwell spent the next three years researching and writing the biography, Nathaniel Hawthorne: The American Years (1948). From 1949 to 1954 he worked as the literary editor of Newsweek and then took up freelancing again until 1956 when he began an association with Sports Illustrated which lasted the rest of his life. He worked on a number of articles, three of which became books: Alexander Wilson: Naturalist and Pioneer (1961), The Real McCoy (1971), and The Hidden Northwest (1972). Subjects of his articles include chess, ornithology, sports in the movies and literary figures in sports.

Ernest Hemingway considered Cantwell "his best bet" in American fiction.[1]

Further reading

  • Lewis, Merrill (1985). Robert Cantwell. Boise State University. ISBN 0884300447
  • Seyersted, Per (2004). Robert Cantwell: An American 1930s Radical Writer and His Apostasy. Novus Press. ISBN 8270993972
  • "Literary Editor And Writer at 2 Magazines". Washington Post: p. B12. 1978-12-10. 

References

  1. ^ Baker, ed., Carlos (1981). Ernest Hemingway, Selected Letters, 1917-1961. Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 709. ISBN 0684167654. 

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Robert Cantwell" Read more