Walter Van Tilburg Clark

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Walter Van Tilburg Clark (August 3, 1909November 10, 1971) was a writer of short stories, poetry and novels, best known for his first novel, The Ox-Bow Incident.

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[edit] Biography

Born in East Orland, Maine, Clark grew up and went to college in Reno, where his father was president of the University of Nevada. In 1933 Clark married Barbara Frances Morse and moved to Cazenovia, New York, where he taught high school English and began his fiction-writing career. His first book, The Ox-Bow Incident, published in 1940, is a tale about a posse mistaking three innocent travelers for cattle rustlers. When the men are killed, the posse-turned-lynch mob finds that they were wrong. The book examines law and order as well as culpability. It was well-received and gave Clark a level of literary acclaim that was unusual for a writer of Westerns. In 1943 it was adapted into a movie starring Henry Fonda. Clark's short story, The Portable Phonograph, is considered to be one of the top ten of that genre written by an American. Clark published two more novels, The City of Trembling Leaves and The Track of the Cat, and a collection of his short stories over the next decade, which were also well-received. Although he continued to write prolifically after 1950, Clark published very little. He took several academic positions, serving for a time in the 1950s as a professor of creative writing at the University of Montana in Missoula, and including returning to Reno to serve as the writer-in-residence at the university from 1962 until his death in Virginia City, Nev., in Nov. of 1971.

Clark was one of the first two authors inducted into the Nevada Writers Hall of Fame when it was established in 1988 by the Friends of the University of Nevada Libraries.

[edit] Books by Clark

[edit] Novels

[edit] Short Story Collections

  • The Watchful Gods and Other Stories (1950)

[edit] External links

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