Myron Brinig | |
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Born | December 22, 1896 Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States |
Died | May 13, 1991 | (aged 94)
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | Jewish-American |
Myron Brinig (December 22, 1896–May 13, 1991) was a Jewish-American author who wrote twenty-one novels from 1929 to 1958.[1]
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Brinig was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Romanian parents, but grew up in Butte, Montana.[2] Brinig began studying at New York University in 1914, where poet Joyce Kilmer gave him lectures on writing.[1] He then studied at Columbia University and started his career by writing short stories for magazines.[3] Brinig's first novel, Madonna Without Child, was released in 1929.[1] Published by Doubleday, the novel tells the story of a woman who is obsessed with another woman's baby.[1]
Many of Brinig's early novels depicted the settlement and development of Montana, the state he grew up in. These novels include Singermann (1929), Wide Open Town (1931), This Man Is My Brother (1932), and The Sun Sets in the West (1935).[3] Brinig based the main character of these novels, Singermann, on his father, Maurice Brinig, who was a Romanian immigrant and shopkeeper.[3] Brinig's novels often depicted miners, labor organizers, farmers, and businessmen living in Montana.[4] These usually became bestsellers in the United States and were praised by critics of The New York Times.[5] One of the best-selling novels, The Sisters, was adapted to a feature length film in 1938, starring Bette Davis and Errol Flynn.[3]
Brinig's novels often dealt with homosexuality.[1][6][7] It was a common theme for Brinig because he was a homosexual himself (although he was publicly closeted all his life).[1] According to the Gay & Lesbian Literary Heritage, Brinig was the "first American Jewish novelist to write in any significant way about the gay experience."[5]
In 1951, The New York Times Book Review said Brinig's "sentimental streak and his sympathetic touch with characters usually lend his books a warm glow of humanity, if not of art."[3] At the beginning of his career, Brinig was praised by critics for his "artistry and inventivenss in narrative, character and incident."[3] In the early 1930s, he was described as one of the leading young writers in America.[4] Brinig's last novels, however, were met with mixed reviews from critics, who criticized them for their "verbosity and banality."[3] Brinig died on May 13, 1991. The cause of his death was gastrointestinal hemorrhage.[3]