MacDonald was a prolific author of crime and suspense novels, many set in his adopted home of Florida. One of the most successful American novelists of his time, MacDonald sold an estimated 70 million books.[1] His best-known works include the popular and critically acclaimed Travis McGee series and his 1957 novel The Executioners, which was filmed twice as Cape Fear, once in 1962 and again in 1991.
Early lifeedit
MacDonald was born in Sharon, Pennsylvania, where his father, Eugene Macdonald, worked for the Savage Arms Corporation. The family relocated to Utica, New York in 1926, his father becoming treasurer of the Utica office of Savage Arms. In 1934, MacDonald was given a choice by his father: spend another year in school as a post-graduate, or go to Europe for several weeks. He chose Europe and this began an interest in travel and photography.
After graduating from high school, he enrolled at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, but he quit during his sophomore year. MacDonald worked at menial jobs in New York City, then was admitted to Syracuse University, where he met his future wife, Dorothy Prentiss. They married secretly in Pennsylvania in 1937, and had a public ceremony in Utica later that year. He graduated from Syracuse University the next year. The couple had one son, Maynard.
In 1939, MacDonald received an MBA from Harvard University. MacDonald later used his education in business and economics in crafting his fiction. Several of his novels are either set in the business world or involve shady financial or real estate deals.
In 1951 he moved his family from Utica, New York to Florida, eventually settling in Sarasota.[2]
Writing careeredit
Early fictionedit
MacDonald's first published short story, "G-Robot," appeared in the July 1936 Double Action Gang magazine.[3] Following his 1945 discharge from the army, MacDonald spent four months writing short stories, generating some 800,000 words and losing 20 pounds (9.1 kg) while typing 14 hours a day, seven days a week. He received hundreds of rejection slips, but "Cash on the Coffin!" appeared in the May 1946 pulp magazineDetective Tales.[3] He would eventually sell nearly 500 short stories to various mystery and adventure fiction magazines.[4] Selections from MacDonald's early magazine fiction, somewhat revised, were later republished in two collections, The Good Old Stuff (1982) and More Good Old Stuff (1984),
Starting with The Brass Cupcake in 1950, McDonald wrote more than forty standalone crime thrillers and domestic dramas, most published as paperback originals and many of them set in Florida. Among them was The Executioners (1957), which was filmed twice as Cape Fear and later republished under that title. MacDonald also wrote three science fiction novels, including The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything (1962), which was filmed for television. After introducing his series character Travis McGee in 1964, MacDonald concentrated mostly on that series, although he did publish four additional standalone novels.
Travis McGeeedit
In 1964, MacDonald published The Deep Blue Good-by, the first of 21 novels starring Travis McGee, a self-described "salvage consultant" who recovers stolen property for a fee of 50 percent, and who narrates his adventures in the first person. McGee originally was to be called Dallas McGee, but MacDonald dropped that name after the Kennedy assassination, borrowing instead the name of Travis Air Force Base.[5] The McGee adventures, each of which has a color in the title, mostly play out in Florida (where McGee lives a hedonistic bachelor life on a houseboat), the Caribbean, or Mexico, and many of them feature his friend and sidekick Dr. Meyer ("Just 'Meyer', please") Meyer, a renowned economist who helps Travis deconstruct elaborate swindles and cases of business corruption.
Deathedit
Following complications of coronary artery bypass surgery, MacDonald slipped into a coma on December 10, 1986. He died at the age of seventy, on December 28, in St. Mary's Hospital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[6] He is buried in Poland, New York.[7] He was survived by his wife Dorothy (1911-1989) and a son, Maynard.
Media adaptationsedit
MacDonald's novel Soft Touch was the basis for the 1961 film Man-Trap.
His 1957 novel The Executioners was filmed during 1962 as Cape Fear featuring Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum. Martin Scorsese directed the 1991 remake of Cape Fear starring Robert DeNiro and Nick Nolte. Because of the success of the films, The Executioners has been republished under the Cape Fear title, even though the novel is set in Florida and does not mention Cape Fear, North Carolina.
His 1963 novel The Drowner was adapted as an episode of the television series Kraft Suspense Theatre entitled "The Deep End," which aired in January 1964.[8]
The novel Cry Hard, Cry Fast was adapted as a two-part episode of the television series Run for Your Life during November 1967.
A 1970 film adaptation of the novel Darker Than Amber was directed by Robert Clouse from a screenplay by MacDonald and Ed Waters. It featured Rod Taylor as series character Travis McGee with Theodore Bikel as his sidekick Meyer. The film earned positive reviews but lost money, causing producer Jack Reeves to abandon his plans to continue the series.[9]
Sam Elliott played Travis McGee in the TV adaptation of The Empty Copper Sea, titled Travis McGee (1983). It relocated McGee to California, eliminating the Florida locales basic to the novel.
A planned film of The Deep Blue Good-by to star Christian Bale as Travis McGee was cancelled by Fox in 2015 after Bale sustained a knee injury. [10] It is not known whether the project will be revived.
In a May 2016 The New York Times interview, author Nathaniel Philbrick said: "I recently discovered John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee series. Every time I finish one of those slender books, I tell myself it’s time to take a break and return to the pile on the night stand but then find myself deep into another McGee novel. Before there were Lee Child and Carl Hiaasen, there was MacDonald — as prescient and verbally precise as anyone writing today can possibly hope to be."[14]
In the novels, McGee had his lodgings on his 52-foot (16 m) houseboat, the Busted Flush, docked at Slip F-18, marina Bahia Mar, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. In 1987, the Friends of Libraries U.S.A. installed a "literary landmark plaque" around what would be Slip F-18 in Bahia Mar. After the docks were remodeled, the plaque was moved to the Dockmaster's office.[15]
(1959) The Lethal Sex (an anthology of mystery stories by women, edited by MacDonald)
Short story collectionsedit
(1966) End of the Tiger and Other Stories
(1971) S*E*V*E*N
(1982) The Good Old Stuff – A collection of select pulp magazine short stories from the beginning of his career, with technology and pop culture references frequently updated to bring the stories into the 1980s
"Murder for Money" – Detective Tales, April 1952 as "All That Blood Money Can Buy"
"Death Writes the Answer" – New Detective Magazine, May 1950 as "This One Will Kill You"
"Miranda" – Fifteen Mystery Stories, October 1950
"They Let Me Live" – Doc Savage Magazine, July–August 1947
"Breathe No More" – Detective Tales, May 1950 as "Breathe No More, My Lovely"
"Some Hidden Grave" – Detective Tales, September 1950 as "The Lady is a Corpse"
"A Time for Dying" – New Detective Magazine, September 1948 as "Tune In on Station Homicide"
"Noose for a Tigress" – Dime Detective, August 1952
"Murder in Mind" – Mystery Book Magazine, Winter 1949
"Check Out at Dawn" – Detective Tales, May 1950 as "Night Watch"
"She Cannot Die" – Doc Savage Magazine, May–June 1948 as "The Tin Suitcase"
"Dead on the Pin" – Mystery Book Magazine, Summer 1950
"A Trap for the Careless" – Detective Tales, March 1950
(1983) Two
(1984) More Good Old Stuff
Deadly Damsel ("Killing All Men!", Black Mask, March 1949)
State Police Report That... ("You'll Never Escape", Dime Detective, May 1949)
Death for Sale ("My Mission Is Murder", Dime Detective, November 1947)
A Corpse in His Dreams (Mystery Book Magazine, Spring 1949)
I Accuse Myself ("The Scarred Hand", Doc Savage, November 1946)
A Place to Live ("Oh, Give Me a Hearse!", Dime Detective, October 1947)
Neighborly Interest ("Killers’ Nest", Detective Tales, February 1949)
The Night Is Over ("You've Got to Be Cold", The Shadow, April–May 1947)
Secret Stain ("Heritage of Hate", Black Mask, July 1949)
Even up the Odds (Detective Story Magazine, January 1948)
Verdict ("Three's a Shroud", New Detective, January 1949)
The High Gray Walls of Hate ("The High Walls of Hate", Dime Detective, February 1948)
Unmarried Widow ("A Corpse-Maker Goes Courting", Dime Detective, July 1949)
You Remember Jeanie (Crack Detective, May 1949)
(1987) The Annex and Other Stories – A very limited edition of 350 printed in Finland containing MacDonald's favorite short stories[16]
(1978) Other Times, Other Worlds (science fiction stories chosen by MacDonald and Martin H. Greenberg)
(1980) Time and Tomorrow (an omnibus of MacDonald's three science fiction novels)
Non-fictionedit
(1965) The House Guests
(1968) No Deadly Drug
(1981) Nothing Can Go Wrong (with Captain John H. Kilpack) [An account of the last voyage of one of the last American liners (the SS Mariposa (1931)) before it was sold to a foreign company.]
(1986) A Friendship: The Letters of Dan Rowan and John D. MacDonald 1967-1974
(1987) Reading for Survival
(2022) Dear Dordo: The World War II Letters of Dorothy and John D. MacDonald
Notesedit
^Merrill, Hugh (2000). The Red Hot Typewriter: The Life and Times of John D. MacDonald. New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Minotaur. ISBN 978-0-312-20905-6.
^"John D. MacDonald - Division of Arts and Culture - Florida Department of State". dos.fl.gov. Retrieved March 17, 2024.
^ abChomko, Mike. "100 Years of Pulp Fictioneer John D. MacDonald". Pulpfest. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
^Jonathan Yardley, "John D. MacDonald's Lush Landscape of Crime", Washington Post, Nov. 11, 2003
^Cassuto, Leonard. Hard-boiled sentimentality: the secret history of American crime stories (Columbia University Press, 2009), page 170; MacDonald, John D. "How to Live With a Hero", The Writer (Combat Publishing, Waukesha, Wisconsin), 7/2008, pages 22-23.
^Fraser, C. Gerald (December 29, 1986). "John D. Macdonald, Novelist, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
Essay: John D. MacDonald and The Only Girl in the Game by David L. Vineyard.
JDM Homepage; a comprehensive website devoted to MacDonald.
John D. MacDonald bibliography 1 (Novels) John D. MacDonald bibliography 2 (Short Stories) at HARD-BOILED site (Comprehensive Bibliographies by Vladimir)
"John D. MacDonald Before Travis McGee, The Travis McGee series made John D. MacDonald famous, but the books he churned out earlier were darker—and better." The Wall Street Journal, September 21-22, 2013
Remembering John D MacDonald and His House on Siesta Key
Works by John D. MacDonald at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)