From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manly Wade Wellman (May 21, 1903 – April 5,
1986) was an American writer. He is best known for his fantasy and
horror stories set in the Appalachian Mountains and for
drawing on the native folklore of that region, but he wrote in a
wide variety of genres including science fiction, fantasy, historical fiction, detective
fiction, western fiction, juvenile fiction and non-fiction. In the later 1920s, during the
silent film era, Wellman wrote movie reviews for the Wichita
Beacon. He also contributed to the writing of the comic book
The Spirit while the franchise's
creator, Will
Eisner, was serving in the US military during World War II.
Three of Wellman's most famous reappearing protagonists are Silver John, aka John
the Balladeer, the wandering backwoods minstrel with a
silver-stringed guitar; the elderly 'occult detective' Judge
Pursuivant; and the playboy-adventurer John
Thunstone.
Wellman was born in Angola.
He was of partial Native American
ancestry. [1] After
graduating from Wichita Municipal University (now Wichita State University) in
Kansas, he went on to receive
a bachelor of laws degree from Columbia University. Wellman was a
long-time resident of North Carolina. He has been the
recipient of many awards, including the World
Fantasy Award and Edgar Allan Poe
Award.
Manly Wade Wellman was said to have loved his wife Frances
Garfield very much, one friend even commented "Those two are the
best advertisement for monogamy in the whole world".
Bibliography
- Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, Vol. 6,
William S. Powell, Ed. (1996) at 160-161 (Article by William S.
Powell)
- Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers: A Bibliography of
First Printings of Their Fiction, L. W. Currey, G. K. Hall
& Co., 1979
Works
Science Fiction and
Fantasy
- The Invading Asteroid (1929)
- Sojarr of Titan (1941)
- The Devil's Asteroid (1941)
- Frogfather (1946)
- Devil's Planet (1951)
- The Beasts from Beyond (1950) [also known as
Strangers on the Heights]
- Twice in Time (1957)
- The Dark Destroyers (1959) [short version of
Nuisance Value]
- Giants from Eternity (1959)
- Island in the Sky (1961)
- The Solar Invasion (1968) (Captain Future novel)
- Worse Things Waiting (1973)
(collection) (Winner, World Fantasy Award for Best
Collection, 1975)
- Sherlock Holmes's War
of the Worlds [With Wade Wellman] (1975)
- The Beyonders (1977)
- The Valley So Low: Southern Mountain Stories (1987)
(Ed. Karl E. Wagner, collection)
- The Collected Stories of Manly Wade Wellman:
- The Third Cry to Legba and Other Invocations (2000)
(John Thunstone and Lee Cobbett stories)
- The Devil is Not Mocked and Other Warnings (2001)
- Fearful Rock and Other Precarious Locales (2001)
(Judge Pursuivant and Sergeant Jaeger stories)
- Sin’s Doorway and Other Ominous Entrances (2003)
- Owls Hoot in the Daytime and Other Omens (2003) (John
the Balladeer stories)
Silver John anthologies and
novels
- Who Fears the Devil?
(1963)
- The Old Gods Waken (1979)
- After Dark (1980)
- The Lost and the Lurking (1981)
- The Hanging Stones (1982)
- The Voice of the Mountain (1984)
- John the Balladeer (1988) (Ed. Karl E. Wagner, revised
collection containing all Silver John short stories)
John Thunstone
anthologies and novels
Young
Adult
- The Lion Roared. (Thrilling Tales) 1927.
- The Sleuth Patrol. 1947.
- The Mystery of Lost Valley. 1948.
- The Raiders of Beaver Lake. 1950.
- The Haunts of Drowning Creek. 1951.
- Wild Dogs of Drowning Creek. 1952.
- The Last Mammoth. 1953.
- Gray Riders: Jeb Stuart and His Men. 1954.
- Rebel Mail Runner. 1954.
- Flag on the Levee. 1955.
- To Lands Unknown. 1956.
- Young Squire Morgan. 1956.
- Lights over Skelton Ridge. 1957.
- The Master of Scare Hollow. 1957.
- Iron Scouts Trilogy
- The Ghost Battalion: A Story of the Iron Scouts. 1958.
- Ride, Rebels!: Adventures of the Iron Scouts. 1959.
- Appomattox Road: Final Adventures of the Iron Scouts.
1960.
- Third String Center. 1960.
- Rifles at Ramsour's Mill: A Tale of the Revolutionary War.
1961.
- Battle for King's Mountain. 1962.
- Clash on the Catawba. 1962.
- The South Fork Rangers. 1963.
- The River Pirates. 1963.
- Settlement on Shocco: Adventures in Colonial Carolina.
1963.
- Mystery at Bear Paw Gap. 1964.
- The Specter of Bear Paw Creek. 1966.
- Battle at Bear Paw Gap. 1966.
- Jamestown Adventure. 1967.
- Brave Horse: The Story of Janus. 1968.
- Carolina Pirate. 1968.
- Frontier Reporter. 1969.
- Mountain Feud. 1969.
- Fast Break Five. 1971.
Other
Novels
- Cahena (1986) (historical novel)
- Candle of the Wicked (1960)
- A Double Life (movie tie-in) (1947)
- Find My Killer (mystery) (1947)
- Fort Sun Dance (western) (1955)
- Not At These Hands (mystery)
Non-Fiction
- Giant in Gray: A Biography of Wade Hampton III of South Carolina.
1949.
- Dead and Gone: Classic Crimes of North Carolina. 1954. (Winner,
Edgar Award for Best
Fact Crime, 1956)
- Rebel Boast: First at Bethel, Last at Apppomattox. 1956.
- Fastest on the River: The Great Race Between the Natchez and
the Robert E. Lee. 1957.
- The Life and Times of Sir Archie. With Elizabeth A. C.
Blanchard. 1958.
- The County of Warren, 1586-1917. 1959.
- They Took Their Stand: The Founders of the Confederacy.
1959.
- The Rebel Songster: Songs the Confederates Sang. 1959.
- Harpers Ferry, Prize of War. 1960.
- The County of Gaston. With Robert F. Cope. 1961.
- The County of Moore, 1947-1947. 1962.
- Winston-Salem:The Founders. 1966.
- Napoleon of the West: A Story of the Aaron Burr Conspiracy.
1970.
- The Kingdom of Madison: A Southern Mountain Fastness And Its
People. 1971.
- The Story of Moore County. 1974.
- A City's Culture: Painting, Music, Literature. 1976.
Awards
Nominated
Won
- Ellery Queen's Mystery
Magazine Award winner, Best Story, A Star for a
Warrior (1946)
- Mystery Writers of America
Edgar Award, Best
Fact Crime Story, Dead and Gone (1956)
- World Fantasy Award winner, Best
Collection/Anthology, Worse Things Waiting (1975)
- World Fantasy Award, Life
Achievement (1980)
- Locus Award, Best Fantasy Novel, After
Dark (Place: 15) (1981)
- British Fantasy Award winner,
Special Award (1985)
- Locus Award, Best Collection, John the
Balladeer (Place: 5) (1989)
- North Carolina Writers' Network Literary Hall of Fame inductee
(1996)
Adaptations
The Silver John stories were the inspiration for "Who Fears the
Devil", a 1994 recording by Joe Bethancourt that featured both
traditional Appalachian folk songs that Silver John would have
known, and Wellman's original lyrics that were in many of the
Silver John stories, set to the traditional melodies that Wellman
used as models.
Much of the following information is taken from Mark Cannon's
bibliography of Wellman.
Larroes Catch Meddlers:
Adapted for television for Lights Out as “The Meddlers”,
aired 7 July 1951
Director: Unknown
Screenwriter: Douglas Wood Gibson, Richard E Davis
Starring: John
Carradine, E G Marshall, Dan Morgan
School for the Unspeakable:
Adapted for television for Lights Out as “The School for the
Unspeakable”, aired 7 January 1952
Director: Unknown
Screenwriter: Richard E Davis
Starring: Donald Buka, Don Hanmer, Leon Tokatyan, Dick Kallman,
Maurice Kenney, Jason Jonson, John Gerstad, Harold Webster
The Valley Was Still:
Adapted for television for The Twilight Zone as “Still Valley,"
aired 24 November 1961
Director: James Sheldon
Screenwriter: Rod
Serling
Starring: Gary
Merrill (Paradine), Vaughn Taylor (Old Man), Ben Cooper
(Dauger), Addison Myers (Sentry); Mark Tapscott (Lieutenant), Jack
Mann (Mallory)
The Devil is Not Mocked:
Adapted for television for Night Gallery, aired 27 October
1971
Director: Gene Kearney
Screenwriter: Gene Kearney
Starring: Helmut Dantine (General), Francis Lederer (Master), Hank
Brandt (Kranz)
Rouse Him Not:
Adapted for TV for Monsters, aired December
1988
Director: Mark Shostrom
Writer: Michael Parry
Starring: Laraine
Newman, Terrance Evans and Alex Cord as John Thunstone.
Who Fears The Devil?
1972 feature film, edited and re-released in 1973 as The Legend
of Hillbilly John
Producer: Barney Rosenzweig
Director: John Newland
Screenwriter: Melvin Levy
Starring: Hedge Capers (John), Susan Strasberg (Poly Wiltse), Denver Pyle (Grandpappy
John), Severn Darden (Mr Marduke), Percy Rodriguez (Capt Lojoie H
Desplain IV), R G Armstrong (Bristowe); Sharon Henesy
(Lily); Sidney Clute (Charles); William Traynor (Rev. Millen); Harris Yulin (Zebulon
Yandro); Alfred Ryder (O J Onselm); Chester Jones (Uncle Anansi);
Val Avery (Cobart); “White Lightnin’” (themselves); “Honor Hound”
(himself).
Film based on the character of Silver John. Two segments of the
film were based on the stories O Ugly Bird and The
Desrick on Yandro.
School for the Unspeakable
(on audiotape with Unfortunate Obsession by Matthew Costello)
Brilliance Corp 1997
Notes
- ^
See the interview with Wellman in Fantasy Voices: Interviews
with American Fantasy Writers by Jeffrey M. Elliot. Borgo
Press, 1982 .
External
links