Irving Stone
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Irving Stone (July 14, 1903 San Francisco, California – August 26, 1989) was an American writer known for his biographical novels of famous historical personalities.
Some of Stone's important works in this category include:
- Lust for Life (1934) - based on the life of Vincent van Gogh
- They Also Ran (1944, updated 1966) - based on candidates who were defeated for U.S. President
- Adversary in the House (1947) - based on the life of Eugene V. Debs and his wife Kate, who opposed socialism[1]
- The Passionate Journey (1949) - based on the life of John Noble
- Immortal Wife (1944) - based on the life of Jessie Benton Frémont
- Love is Eternal (1954) - based on the marriage of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd
- Men to Match My Mountains - based on the opening of the Far West, 1840 - 1900
- The Agony and the Ecstasy - (1961) - based on the life of Michelangelo
- The Passions of the Mind (1971) - based on the life of Sigmund Freud
- The Greek Treasure (1975) - based on the discovery of Troy by Heinrich Schliemann
- The Origin (1980) - based on the life of Charles Darwin
- Depths of Glory (1985) - based on the life of Camille Pissarro
- For the Defense - based on the life of Clarence Darrow
- Those Who Love - based on the life of John Adams and Abigail Adams
- Sailor on Horseback - based on the life of Jack London.
In 1956, a popular film version was made of Lust for Life, based on Stone's 1934 novel, starring Kirk Douglas as Van Gogh.
Stone's main source for Lust for Life, as noted in the afterword, was Van Gogh's letters to his brother Theo. It seems probable that Eugene Debs' letters to and from his own brother Theo provided a foundation for Adversary in the House. Stone additionally did much of his research "in the field". For example, he spent many years living in Italy while working on The Agony and the Ecstasy. The Italian government lauded Stone with several honorary awards during this period for his cultural achievements highlighting Italian history.
When at home, Stone relied upon the research facilities and expertise made available to him by Esther Euler, head research librarian of the University of California at Los Angeles, to whom he dedicated and thanked, in addition to many others, in several of his works.
In the 1960s, Stone received an honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of Southern California, where he had previously earned a Masters Degree from the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences.
Stone enjoyed a long marriage to his wife and editor on many of his works, Jean Stone. The Stones lived primarily in Los Angeles, California. During their lifetime, Stone and his wife funded a foundation to support charitable causes they believed in.
[edit] References
- ^ Kate Debs seemed to have been so hostile to Debs's socialist activities - it threatened her sense of middle-class respectability - that novelist Irving Stone was led to call her, in the title of his fictional portrayal of the life of Debs, the Adversary in the House. (Daniel Bell, Marxian Socialism in the United States, footnote on page 88)