“I
arise full of eagerness and energy, knowing well what achievement lies ahead of
me.”
– Zane Grey
Best
known for his popular novels of the Old West, Grey idealized the
American frontier. His
1912 best seller Riders of the Purple Sage
was the highlight of an amazing 90 books in the genre, many of which
had second lives and continuing influence when adapted as films and
television productions. Overall, his novels and short stories have been
adapted into 112
films, two television episodes, and a television series, The Zane Grey Theater.
Born on this day in 1872, Grey grew
up in Zanesville, Ohio, a city founded by his maternal great-grandfather
Ebenezer Zane, an American Revolutionary War patriot. From an early age he was intrigued by history
and even though he first chose dentistry for a career, he gravitated to writing
about history and the American West.
He wrote some 9 million words in his lifetime (besides his Westerns,
he wrote 2 hunting books, 6 children’s books, 3 baseball books, and 8 fishing books). His
total book sales – which made him a millionaire many times over – have been
over 40 million.
A great athlete (he was a star baseball player in college and as a minor league player) and a frequent brawler as a young man, his writing depicting both athleticism and fistfights were often cited by his readers when talking about the "realism" in his books.
“Well, what is writing,” he responded, “but an expression of my own life?”
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