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Gifford Paul Cheshire {27.7.1905-9.1.1973}, amerikanischer Schriftsteller |
- Chad Merriman
- Paul Craig
- Glenn Corbin
- Ford Pendleton
QUELLE: Hawk | Weigand | (Andere)
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Gifford Paul Cheshire {27.7.1905-9.1.1973}, amerikanischer Schriftsteller |
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George Charles Appell {1.6.1914-26.6.1982}, amerikanischer Autor |
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Johnston McCulley (February 2, 1883 – November 23, 1958) was the author of hundreds of stories, fifty novels, numerous screenplays for film and television, and the creator of the character Zorro. |
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Eugene Cunningham {29.11.1896}, amerikanischer Schriftsteller |
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Herbert Arthur Shappiro {24.5.1899-15.3.1975}, amerikanischer Schriftsteller {source: https://bearalley.blogspot.com/2006/08/herbert-shappiro.html) |
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Wells Jerome, {?-?}, britischer Autor von Westernromanen, aktiv zwischen 1938 und 1956 |
Nr.. /No. | Titel / Title (pp) | Verlag / Publisher | Year /Jahr |
Bad Hombre (288) | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1940 | |
Borderland | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1945 | |
Corsair of the Plains | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1952 | |
Double Circle Days (192) | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1942 | |
Jim Brady Rides Herd (288) | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1941 | |
Land of the Tumbleweed | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1947 | |
Pimente Pete - Outlaw (158) | Ernest Benn Ltd. | 1956 | |
Sons of the Eagle (255) | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1939 | |
Th' Trouble Trailer (160) | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1943 | |
Th' Man from Montanny (256) | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1938 | |
The Black Colt (186) | Mellifont, London | 1955 | |
Th' Ghost Riders | Ward, Lock & Co, London | 1946 | |
The Black Colt | Quality Press, London | 1950 | |
The Riddle of Bald Buttes | Quality Press, London | 1949 |
Richard Amory (October 18, 1927, Halfway, OR – August 1, 1981, San Jose, CA), born Richard Wallace Love, was an American writer. (wikipedia) |
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Myrtle Amelia Bean wurde in Utah geboren lebte später in Calirfornien und veröffentlichte um 1960 einige Western. Lebensdaten nicht bekannt |
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Allan Vaughan Elston was born on July 28, 1887 in Kansas City, Missouri. Elston studied engineering at the University of Missouri where he earned a civil engineering Bachelor of Science degree in 1909. After college he worked as a transitman for railroads in the West and Midwest, a resident engineer, a cattle rancher and a consulting engineer. He began work as a free-lance writer of western fiction and mystery stories in 1924. He became well known for his western novels and was a member of the Western Writers of America. Elston's publications include Come Out and Fight! (1941), Roundup on the Picketwire (1952), Long Lope to Lander (1954), Showdown (1956), and Saddle Up for Steamboat (1973). He passed away on October 21, 1976 in Santa Ana, California. source: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt1b69p3w0/ |
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Joseph L[ewis] Chadwick, né le 18 mai 1909 à York en Pennsylvanie aux États-Unis, et mort en avril 1987 à Tampa, en Floride, est un écrivain américain, auteur de roman policier, de roman d'espionnage et de roman western (wikipedia) |
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Frank Gruber was born February 2, 1904, in Elmer, Minnesota and died December 9, 1969 in Santa Monica, California. But in those sixty-five years, Gruber became one of the most prolific writers of pulp fiction, writing more than 300 stories for over 40 pulp magazines, as well as over sixty novels, and over 200 screenplays and television scripts. (source: http://www.thrillingdetective.com/trivia/gruber.html |
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Allan K[rech] Echols {7.4.1896-1.3.1953}, amerikanischer Westernautor |
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{1902-1989}, amerikanischer Drehbuchautor und Schriftsteller. |
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Peter B[ern(h)ard] Kyne (October 12, 1880 – November 25, 1957) was an American novelist who published between 1904 and 1940. He was born and died in San Francisco, California. Many of his works were adapted into screenplays starting during the silent film era, particularly his first novel, The Three Godfathers, which was published in 1913 and proved to be a huge success. More than 100 films were adapted from his works between 1914 and 1952, many of the earliest without consent or compensation. |
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Kenneth Taylor Perkins {16.5.1890-7.6.1951}, amerikanischer Schriftsteller "Kenneth Taylor Perkins (at left), half-brother to James Croswell Perkins was playwrite, screenwriter, educator and author. Kenneth Taylor Perkins was born on 16 May, 1890 in Kodaikanal, India. After his mother died and his father remarried, he was sent to San Francisco to live with his wealthy, shipping merchant grandfather. He attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he earned a degree in English literature. While at UC Berkeley, Perkins became acquainted with future authors Frederick Schiller (Max Brand), Sidney Howard and Aubrey Drury. After graduation, he became an English instructor at Pomona College at Claremont, California. During the First World War, Perkins served with the US Army as a second lieutenant in the field artillery. By the mid-1920s, a number of Perkins' books and short stories were appearing in magazines or being adapted for the cinema. Two of his plays, "Creoles" (1927), "Dance with the Gods" (1934 with Lena Horne) and "Desire" (1930) were produced on Broadway. His story "Ride Him Cowboy!" was adapted for the silver screen twice; the later version starred John Wayne. Over his career, Perkins submitted scores of short stories (mostly Westerns) for publication in magazines and newspapers. Kenneth Taylor Perkins died on 7 June, 1951 after a five-month stay at Veterans Administration Hospital in Los Angeles. He was survived by his wife Grace and a daughter." (source: http://server16.websitehostserver.net/~patandme/CCAHistory/JamesCroswellPerkins.html |
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Edwin Booth (1906-1980) was a writer of Western fiction source: http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv33865#overview |
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Nelson Coral Nye (28.9,1907–4.10.1997) was an American author, editor, and reviewer of Western fiction, and wrote non-fiction books on quarter horses. He wrote over 125 books, won two Spur Awards: one for best Western reviewer and critic, and one for his novel Long Run, and in 1968 won the Saddleman Award for "“Outstanding Contributions to the American West.” {wikipedia} |
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Clarence Budington "Bud" Kelland (July 11, 1881 – February 18, 1964) was an American writer. He once described himself as "the best second-rate writer in America". (wikipedia) |
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Arthur Henry Gooden (23 October 1879 – 22 July 1971) was an English screenwriter of the silent era. He wrote for 53 films between 1916 and 1937. He also wrote several western fiction novels about the American Old West. (wikipedia) |
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W[ilbur] C[oleman] Tuttle (November 11, 1883 – June 6, 1969) was an American writer who sold more than 1000 magazine stories and dozens of novels, almost all of which were westerns.Tuttle wrote mainly for pulp magazines; his main market was Adventure magazine. (wikipedia) |
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Eugen Karl Bühler {1901-1965}, deutscher Autor von Western und Abenteuerromanen |
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Fred East {1895-1983 (?)}, amerikanischer Autor |
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Roan, Tom [i.e., Thomas B. Roan] (1894-1958) Born in Snead, Alabama; died in New Jersey; former peace officer who grew up in Alabama; prolific author of western stories for the pulps. see: http://www.philsp.com/homeville/FMI/z/z184.htm#A17930 |
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Eugene Manlove Rhodes (January 19, 1869 – June 27, 1934) was an American writer, nicknamed the "cowboy chronicler". |
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William Lee Hopson {13.4.1907-28.3.1975}, amerikanischer Autor |
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Lee Floren {22.3.1910-1995} amerikanischer Autor |
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John Edward Ames {* 30.12.1949), amerikanischer Autor |
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William Everett Cook (1921 – July 1964), was a American western writer |
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Alan Brown Le May (June 3, 1899 – April 27, 1964) was an American novelist and screenplay writer. He is most remembered for two classic Western novels, The Searchers (1954) and The Unforgiven (1957). |
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Ray Hogan (15. Dezember 1908 - 14. Juli 1998) amerikanischer Westerautor |
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Wayne D. Overholser (* 4. September 1906 in Pomeroy, Washington; † 27. August 1996 in Boulder, Colorado) war ein US-amerikanischer Westernautor. |
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Peter B. Germano (New Bedford, Massachusetts, May 17, 1913 - Wildwood, California, September 20, 1983) was an American author of short stories, novels, and television scripts. He began his career with short stories. He wrote articles documenting the Marines in World War II as a combat correspondent. He wrote novels, most of which were westerns, but also wrote science fiction. And, as television became ever-present in American culture, Peter wrote numerous television scripts for western, science-fiction, drama, and cartoon series. (wikipedia) qv: https://sites.google.com/site/pgermanocom/ |
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Gordon D[onald] Shirreffs (* 15. Januar 1914 in Chicago, Illinois; † 9. Februar 1996 Granada Hills, Kalifornien) war ein US-amerikanischer Schriftsteller. Viele seine Bücher erschienen in deutschen Übersetzungen |
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Werner Dietsch (1928-1997) deutscher Autor, zeitweise auch als Redakteur des Wolfgang Marken-Verlages tätig. |
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Harry Sinclair Drago (20 March 1887 - 25 October 1979) was an American writer of screenplays and Westerns. American novelist Harry Sinclair Drago was born in White Plains, New York. He held a number of jobs in the writing and publishing industry, including reporter and columnist for the Toledo Bee in Toledo, Ohio and Hollywood scriptwriter (1928-1933), but is best known for his historical fiction, most of which was set in the American Southwest. His novels include Oh Suzanna, Whispering Sage, Out of the Silent North, Buckskin Affair, Fenced Off, and Decision at Broken Butte. Drago was a prolific writer, averaging three books a year, and published more than a hundred books over his career. In addition to his novels, he contributed articles and short stories to The Westerners and other publications and wrote several screenplays and novelizations; in his later years he turned his hand from historical fiction to non-fiction histories of the American West. Drago was a member of the Publication Committee of the Westerners, New York Posse (branch), a non-profit educational organization of those whose interest is to preserve and record the cultural background and development of the West. His work received many awards, among them the Buffalo Award for best western book of the year (1960) for Wild, Woolly, and Wicked, the National Cowboy Hall of Fame Award (1970) for The Great Range Wars, and the Western Heritage Award (1971) (source: https://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/d/drago_hs.htm) |
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Bertha Muzzy Sinclair or Sinclair-Cowan, née Muzzy (November 15, 1871 – July 23, 1940), best known by her pseudonym B. M. Bower, was an American author who wrote novels, fictional short stories, and screenplays about the American Old West. (source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._M._Bower) |
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Alexander Leslie Scott (15.1.1893 - 1974), amerikanischer Autor von Westernromanen; etliche Titel (Ps. Jackson Cole, Bradford Scott) auch in deutsch. qv: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Leslie_Scott |
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William MacLeod Raine (June 22, 1871 – July 25, 1954), was a British-born American novelist who wrote fictional adventure stories about the American Old West. (source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_MacLeod_Raine) Es gibt einige deutschsprachige Übersetzungen. |
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Archie Lynn Joscelyn, né le 25 juillet 1899 à Great Falls dans le Montana aux États-Unis et mort le 28 février 1986 à Missoula dans le Montana, est un écrivain américain, auteur de roman policier de roman western et de soap opera. (wikipedia) qv: http://montanacowboyfame.org/uploads/3/5/1/5/35150022/archie_lynn_joscelyn.pdf |
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"Walter John Coburn was born in White Sulphur Springs, Montana
Territory, on October 23, 1889. His father, a pioneer cattleman, arrived
in Montana Territory in 1863 and founded the Circle C Ranch, one of the
largest outfits in the Northwest at the time. Walt gained his cowboy
experience which served as material for his future fiction and
non-fiction stories as a "$40 a month cowhand" on the Circle C. From his first accepted story in 1922 until the demise of the pulp western serials in the 1950s, Coburn gained a reputation as "king of the pulp westerns." He published more than 1,000 stories and 40 books. At one point he was producing 600,000 published words a year, and he kept that pace up for two decades. His stories were particularly noted for their authenticity to the frontier and range experience. Coburn first came to Arizona in 1916 and ranched with his brothers in Globe. He moved to Prescott in 1927, spent 35 years in Tucson and returned to Prescott for the last 10 years of his life. Coburn committed suicide at the age of 82 on 25 May 1971. His autobiography, Walt Coburn: Western Word Wrangler, was published posthumously in 1974."{source: https://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/collections/walt-coburn-papers} Einige seiner Western erschienen auch in deutsch. |
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Frank Castle {1910-1994}, amerikanischer Autor von Western und Krimis, die zum Teil auch ins Deutsche übersetzt wurden |
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L[eonard] L[ondon] Foreman (23.6.1901-1969), wurde in London geboren und lebte später in Kalifornien. Er veröffentlichte vorwiegend Western, darunter auch einige Titel, die ins Deutsche übertragen wurden. |
Rückseite eines US-Paperbacks von 1958
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Luke Short, eigentlich Frederick Dilley Glidden, (* 19. November 1908 in Kewanee, Illinois; † 18. August 1975 in Aspen, Colorado) war ein erfolgreicher amerikanischer Western-Schriftsteller und Journalist. viel seiner Titel erschienen auch in deutscher Übersetzung |
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Jackson Gregory (March 12, 1882 – June 12, 1943) war ein amerikanischer Lehrer, Journalist und Schriftsteller. Einige seiner Western erschienen auch in deutscher Sprache. |
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Giles Alfred Lutz (March 1910–June 1982) - amerikanischer Westernautor, der auch in anderen Bereichen unterhaltender Literatur tätig war. - Etliche seiner Bücher erschienen auch in deutscher Übersetung. |