Floyd Dell

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Floyd Dell
Born Floyd Dell
June 28, 1887
Barry, Illinois, USA
Died July 23, 1969(1969-07-23) (aged 82)
Bethesda, Maryland, USA

Signature

Floyd Dell (June 28, 1887 – July 23, 1969) was an American literary critic, novelist, playwright, poet, and magazine editor.

Biography

Dell was born in Barry, Illinois on June 28, 1887.[1]

As a literary critic, Dell had a national reputation for promoting modern American literature in the 1910s. He was a best-selling author of novels and books of stories and essays, as well as a lifelong poet and the author of a hit Broadway play, Little Accident (1928).[2][3] His influence is alive in the work of many major American writers from the first half of the 20th century.

After dropping out of high school in Davenport, Iowa, Dell found work as a reporter on local newspapers and with the socialist magazine Tri-City Worker. While in Davenport he also began publishing poetry in national magazines.

In 1908, Dell moved on to Chicago where he became editor of the Friday Literary Review and a leader of the Chicago Renaissance. In his position at FLR, Dell promoted the work of Theodore Dreiser, Sherwood Anderson, Carl Sandburg and other Chicago writers. Relocating to New York in 1913, Dell became managing editor of Max Eastman's radical magazine The Masses, and a leader of the pre-war bohemian community in Greenwich Village.

Dell joined fellow Davenporters Susan Glaspell and George Cram Cook as a member of the Provincetown Players and his play King Arthur's Socks was the first performed by that historic theater group. Following the war, Dell turned to fiction and his first novel, the bildungsroman Moon-Calf, became a best seller. This was followed by several other novels with limited success.

Dell continued to publish both fiction and non-fiction until the end of his life. He joined the WPA and U.S. Information Service in 1935 from which he retired following World War II.

He died in Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., on July 23, 1969.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Floyd Dell". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica. 2012. Retrieved January 22, 2012. 
  2. Greasley, Philip A., Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Indiana U. Press, 2001
  3. Made into a movie in 1930 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0021078/
  • Clayton, Douglas, Floyd Dell: The Life and Times of an American Rebel, (Chicago: Ivan R, Dee, 1994)
  • Dell, Floyd, Love in the machine age: a psychological study of the transition from patriarchal society, (London: G. Routledge, 1930)

External links

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