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John Collier (fiction writer)

John Henry Noyes Collier (3 May 1901 – 6 April 1980) was a British-born writer and screenwriter best known for his short stories, many of which appeared in The New Yorker from the 1930s to the '50s. Most were collected in The John Collier Reader (Knopf, 1972); earlier collections include a 1951 volume, Fancies and Goodnights, which won the International Fantasy Award and remains in print. Individual stories are frequently anthologized in fantasy collections. John Collier's writing has been praised by authors such as Anthony Burgess, Ray Bradbury, Roald Dahl, Neil Gaiman, Michael Chabon, Wyndham Lewis, and Paul Theroux. He appears to have given few interviews in his life; those include conversations with biographer Betty Richardson, Tom Milne, and Max Wilk.

John Collier

John Henry Noyes Collier
(1901-05-03)3 May 1901
London, England

6 April 1980(1980-04-06) (aged 78)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.

  • Author
  • screenwriter

Career[edit]

Poetry[edit]

He began writing poetry at the age of nineteen, and was first published in 1920.[5]


For ten years Collier attempted to reconcile intensely visual experience opened to him by the Sitwells and the modern painters with the more austere preoccupations of those classical authors who were fashionable in the 1920s.[3] He felt that his poetry was unsuccessful, however; he was not able to make his two selves (whom he oddly described as the "archaic, uncouth, and even barbarous" Olsen and the "hysterically self-conscious dandy" Valentine) speak with one voice.[4]


Being an admirer of James Joyce, Collier found a solution in Joyce's Ulysses. "On going for my next lesson to Ulysses, that city of modern prose," he wrote, "I was struck by the great number of magnificent passages in which words are used as they are used in poetry, and in which the emotion which is originally aesthetic, and the emotion which has its origin in intellect, are fused in higher proportions of extreme forms than I had believed was possible."[4] The few poems he wrote during this time were afterward published in a volume under the title Gemini.[3]

Fiction[edit]

While he had written some short stories during the period in which he was trying to find success as a poet, his career did not take shape until the publication of His Monkey Wife in 1930. It enjoyed a certain small popularity and critical approval that helped to sell his short stories.[2] Biographer Richardson explained the literary context for the book:

(1935)

Sylvia Scarlett

(1937)

Elephant Boy

(1942)

Her Cardboard Lover

(1946)

Deception

(1949)

Roseanna McCoy

(1951) (uncredited)

The African Queen

(1953) (Collier wrote two of three segments: "The Jealous Lover" and "Equilibrium")

The Story of Three Loves

(1955)

I Am a Camera

(1965)

The War Lord

Poetry award granted by the Paris literary magazine This Quarter for his poetry collection Gemini.

for Fiction (1952) for Fancies and Goodnights (1951).

International Fantasy Award

for Best Short Story (1952) for Fancies and Goodnights (1951).

Edgar Award

Death[edit]

Collier died of a stroke on April 6, 1980, in Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, California. Near the end of his life, he wrote, "I sometimes marvel that a third-rate writer like me has been able to palm himself off as a second-rate writer."

The at the University of Texas at Austin's papers "represent his transition from a poet to writer of novels, short stories, and screenplays. The bulk of the papers are manuscripts covering several genres, although a substantial amount of correspondence is also included."[5]

Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center

Libraries, Special Collections

University of Iowa

Colliers' son, John G. S. Collier

His Monkey Wife: or Married to a Chimp (1930) (currently in print,  0-9664913-3-5)

ISBN

No Traveller Returns (a , 1931)

chapbook

Tom's A-Cold: A Tale (1933) (published in the U.S. as Full Circle)

Defy the Foul Fiend: or, The Misadventures of a Heart (1934)

Another American Tragedy — A man mutilates himself in order to murder an aged rich relative and impersonate him, to change the will in his own favor - only to discover he isn't the only one who wants the old man dead.

Back for Christmas — A man plots a foolproof way to murder his wife, but the murder is exposed because of an unexpected gift she left for him to find. Originally published in The New Yorker (October 7, 1939).[21] (Grams erroneously cites a later publication: 13 December 1939 issue of The Tattler (sic - The Tatler was the magazine concerned).[22]) This story has been dramatised many times: once for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, three times for the Suspense radio series[23] (Peter Lorre portrayed the main character in the first broadcast in 1943; the 1948 and 1956 broadcasts both starred Herbert Marshall), as well as once for an episode of Tales of the Unexpected.

[20]

Bottle Party — A (genie) tricks a man into taking his place in the bottle.

jinn

Cancel All I Said — A couple's young daughter takes a screen test. The couple's lives are torn apart by the studio head's spoken offer to make the child a star.

The Chaser — A young man buying a genuine love potion cannot understand why the seller sells love potions for a dollar, but also offers a colorless, tasteless, undetectable poison at a much, much higher price.

Evening Primrose — Probably his most famous; about people who live in a department store, hiding during the day and coming out at night. Betty Richardson wrote that the store is "the , of course, of a consumer society ... populated by acquisitive people who pose as mannequins by daylight; by night, they emerge to grab what they want": "Happy to sacrifice all human emotions—love, pity, integrity—for the sake of consumer goods, these denizens have their own pecking order and police. The primary duty of the latter is to suppress any rebellion against this materialistic society."[1] The story was read by Vincent Price and recorded on an LP record by Caedmon Audio in 1980. The story also served as the inspiration for the 1984 music video "Prime Time" by the British progressive rock band The Alan Parsons Project.

Valhalla

Interpretation of a Dream — A man experiences disturbing and serial dreams of falling from the thirty-ninth story of the skyscraper in which he works, passing one story every night. In his dreams, he looks through the window and makes detailed and veridical observations of the real-life inhabitants as he passes.

Over Insurance — A loving couple puts nine-tenths of their money into life insurance and becomes so impoverished as a result that each spouse decides to poison the other, unaware that the other has made the same decision.

Special Delivery — A man falls in love with a department-store mannequin. This was later adapted for an episode of the 1960s TV series , retitled "Eve", which starred Dennis Waterman and Carol Lynley.

Journey to the Unknown

The Steel Cat — An inventor uses his pet mouse to demonstrate his better mousetrap to an insensitive prospect who insists on seeing the mouse actually die.

Three Bears Cottage — A man tries unsuccessfully to poison his wife with a mushroom as retaliation for serving him a smaller egg than the one she served herself.

Thus I Refute Beelzy — An odiously rational father is confounded by the imagination of his small son.

The Touch of Nutmeg Makes It — A man tried for murder and acquitted for lack of motive tells his story to sympathetic friends.

Wet Saturday — Stuck indoors on a rainy Saturday, a family must deal with a problem. The problem turns out to be murder, and how to an innocent visitor for the crime. Dramatised in the Suspense radio series broadcast on June 24, 1942 and December 16, 1943 featuring Charles Laughton, and as an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents broadcast on September 30, 1956. The episode was actually directed by Hitchcock himself. It was also later adapted for Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected.

frame

Youth from Vienna — A couple, whose careers (tennis player and actress) depend on youth, are forced to deal with a gift of a single dose of rejuvenating medicine that cannot be divided or shared. This story was the basis for , a 1956 TV pilot for a proposed anthology series, produced by Desilu and written, directed, and hosted by Orson Welles.

The Fountain of Youth

(1948). The Checklist of Fantastic Literature. Chicago: Shasta Publishers. p. 80.

Bleiler, Everett

Bloom, Alan (1996). "John Collier, Fantastic Miniaturist". In (ed.). Discovering Classic Fantasy Fiction: Essays on the Antecedents of Fantastic Literature. I.O. Evans studies in the philosophy & criticism of literature; no. 23. San Bernardino, CA: Borgo Press. pp. 68–75. ISBN 1-557-42086-6.

Darrell Schweitzer

Bloom, James D. (2009). . Lanham, MD: Lexington Books/Rowman Littlefield. ISBN 9780739129234.

Hollywood Intellect

; Staley, Thomas F. (1989). British Mystery Writers, 1920–1939. Detroit, Mich.: Gale Research. ISBN 0-810-34555-2.

Benstock, Bernard

; John Grant (1997). The Encyclopedia of Fantasy. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 210. ISBN 0-312-14594-2.

Clute, John

Currey, L. W. (1979). . Boston: G. K. Hall. pp. 121–122.

Science Fiction and Fantasy Authors: A Bibliography of First Printings of Their Fiction and Selected Nonfiction

Indick, Ben P. (1988). "Sardonic Fantasies: John Collier". In (ed.). Discovering Modern Horror Fiction II. Mercer Island, WA: Starmont. pp. 121–127.

Darrell Schweitzer

(1985). "John Collier". In E. F. Bleiler (ed.). Supernatural Fiction Writers: Fantasy and Horror. New York: Scribners. pp. 577–583. ISBN 0-684-17808-7.

Kessel, John

McFall, Matthew (1998). John Collier (1901-1980): Life and Works [dissertation]. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Meyers, Walter E. (1983). "Fancies and Goodnights". In Frank N Magill (ed.). Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature, Vol 2. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press. pp. 520–523.

(Spring 1976). "The Elusive John Collier". Sight & Sound (45): 104–108.

Milne, Tom

Richardson, Betty (1983). John Collier. Twayne's English authors series : TEAS 367. Boston: Twayne.  0-805-76853-X.

ISBN

(1983). "His Monkey Wife: Or, Married to a Chimp". In Frank N Magill (ed.). Survey of Modern Fantasy Literature, Vol 2. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press. pp. 730–731.

Stableford, Brian

(1985). "His Monkey Wife". Sunrise With Seamonsters: A Paul Theroux Reader. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. pp. 303–308. ISBN 0-395-38221-1.

Theroux, Paul

at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin

John Collier Collection

A Guide to Supernatural Fiction: John Collier

at IMDb

John Collier

at Library of Congress, with 30 library catalogue records

John Collier