“Writing
is sweat and drudgery most of the time. And you have to love it in order to
endure the solitude and the discipline.” – Peter Benchley
Born
in New York City on May 8, 1940 Benchley (who died in 2006) wrote the
novel Jaws, subsequently made into a blockbuster movie by Steven
Spielberg, who said he initially found many of the characters
unsympathetic and actually wanted the shark to win.
Benchley
came from a writing legacy, his grandfather Robert being one of the founders of
the famed writing group known as the Algonquin Round Table. But
Peter struggled to get his own foot in the publishing door and nearly decided
against it. He had little early success and was just doing part-time freelance writing when he pitched the idea for Jaws as “one final attempt to
stay alive as a writer.” And the rest, as the saying goes . . .
Released in 1974, Jaws was at or near the top of the New York Times bestseller list for 44 weeks and has been continuously in print ever since. While he wrote a couple more bestselling novels, including The Deep (also adapted as a movie), he had more success as a screenwriter (11 movie adaptations) and writing about conservation. His book Ocean Planet: Writings and Images of the Sea is considered one of the definitive works on the topic. Today, the annual Peter Benchley Ocean Awards are awarded to recognize conservation efforts on behalf of the world's oceans.
“The
ocean is the only alien and potentially hostile environment on the planet into
which we tend to venture without thinking about the animals that live there,
how they behave, how they support themselves, and how they perceive us,” he
said. “Without the oceans, there would
be no life on earth.”
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