Thomas Savage | |
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Thomas Savage. Photograph by Adison Berkey (circa 1976) |
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Born | Thomas Savage April 25, 1915 Salt Lake City, Utah, United States |
Died | July 25, 2003 Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States |
(aged 88)
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Genres | Western |
Notable work(s) | Power of the Dog (1967), A Strange God (1974), I Heard My Sister Speak My Name (1977), The Corner of Rife and Pacific (1988) |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Fitzgerald |
Children |
Robert Brassil Savage |
Influences
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Influenced
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Thomas Savage (April 25, 1915 - July 25, 2003) was an American author of 13 novels published between 1944 and 1988. He is best known for his Western novels, which drew on early experiences in the American West.
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Savage was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, in 1915 to Elizabeth (Yearian) and Benjamin Savage. His parents divorced when he was two years old and, when his mother remarried three years later, he moved with her to a ranch in Beaverhead County, Montana.[1] After graduating from Beaverhead County High School, he studied writing at Montana State College (today the University of Montana), transferring to Colby College in Waterville, Maine, where he received a B.A. in 1940.[2]
By the time he was twenty-nine, Savage had worked as a wrangler, ranch hand, welder, and railroad brakeman.[3] Following the publication of his first novel, The Pass, Savage secured a teaching position at Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts, where he taught from 1947-1948. He left Suffolk in 1949 for an assistant professorship at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts. By 1955, Savage was able to stop teaching and focus on his writing full time.[4]
In 1955, Savage and his wife purchased a home in Georgetown, Maine, where they would remain for nearly thirty years. In 1982, the Savages built a home on Whidbey Island in Puget Sound, on property given to him by a sister he met only in adulthood.[1] Following the death of his wife in 1989, Savage lived briefly in Seattle and San Francisco, before moving to Virginia Beach, Virginia in order to be near his daughter. He died in Virginia, July 25, 2003, at the age of eighty-eight.
Savage published his first story, "The Bronc Stomper," in 1937 in Coronet under the name Tom Brenner. Annie Proulx has noted that the story was "unremarkable except for its unusual subject matter," breaking a horse.[1]
His last novel, The Corner of Rife and Pacific, was nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award[5] and received the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award in 1989.
When asked to speak of his influences, Savage stated "Mrs. Bridge by Evan S. Connell, is one of the best novels I ever read. I was influenced by John Steinbeck, Robert Benchley, and Dorothy Parker. I was a history major, read little fiction, chiefly biography and history. I read S.J. Perelman."[6]