Gordon D. Shirreffs

Gordon D. Shirreffs (January 15, 1914 – February 9, 1996) was a U.S. author, known mostly for writing Western and juvenile (young adult) novels. He also wrote a teleplay. Two of his novels, Judas Gun and Rio Bravo, were made into movies (I Live for Your Death (1968) and Oregon Passage (1957), respectively). One of his short stories ("Silent Beckoning") became the movie The Lonesome Trail (1955). His novel "Last Train From Gunhill" was made into a film starring Kirk Douglas and Anthony Quinn and released in 1959. Strangely, however, Les Crutchfield, who wrote a great deal for Gunsmoke, is cited as the author for the story and Shirreffs' name is not given although all of the character names and plot follows those in the novel.

Contents

Biography

Gordon Shirreffs was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1914, soon after his mother emigrated from Scotland. Shirreffs was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II where he was stationed in Alaska's Aleutian Islands as part of the Pacific Theater.

Shirreffs married Alice Johanna Gutwein on February 7, 1941 in El Paso, TX. They had two children, a daughter Carole (born 1943) and a son Brian (born 1946.)

He lived in Granada Hills, San Fernando Valley, CA from 1952 until his death in 1996.

Bibliography

Novels

Omnibus

References

External links