Jeremy Lane (writer)
Jeremy Lane | |
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Born | April 29, 1893 |
Died |
September 19, 1963 Birmingham, Michigan, United States | (aged 70)
Occupation | short story writer, novelist, band leader, newspaper reporter, newspaper advertising salesman |
Genre | Mystery, Lost World |
Jeremy Lane (April 29, 1893 - September 19, 1963 ) was a writer of mystery and lost world short stories and novels. His stories appeared in pulp magazines including The All-Story Weekly, Top-Notch Magazine, The Smart Set and People's Favorite Magazine. His books, usually starring his detective hero Whitney Wheat, included Death To Drumbeat, Murder Menageries, Murder Spoils Everything, Kill Him Tonight, The Left Hand of God and Murder Has Bright Eyes. His novel, Yellow Men Sleep, was published by The Century Company in 1919.[1]
Born Herman Dale Schuchert in Mishawaka, Indiana, on April 29, 1893, he took the pen name Jeremy Lane (and later legally changed his name to that) to avoid post-World War I anti-German backlash as he was beginning his musical and literary careers.
As “Jerry” Lane he also led a small dance band known as The Symphonic Step Stimulators which toured the Midwest from the early 1920s into the 1940s. In the 1950s and 1960s he was a reporter and feature writer for a local newspaper in New York State’s Mohawk Valley region.
With his wife Betty (née Bessie May Ross 1890-1945), he was part of the so-called “group” who studied in Chicago with Georges Gurdjieff, an Armenian Russian (1877-1949) who combined ideas from Eastern mysticism and religions with his own ideas about living a full and productive life.
His daughter Liela (1920-2014), known professionally as Lee Murray, was a popular radio/TV/cable personality in the Detroit, Michigan area from the mid-1960s through the 1980s.
Notes
- ↑ "Latest Books", The New York Times Book Review, 1919-09-07, p. 80
References
- Jeremy Lane at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- "Jeremy Lane, 70, Wrote Murder-Mystery Novels", The New York Times, 1963-09-20, p. 32
- Contento, William G. (2008-05-04). "The FictionMags Index". Retrieved 2008-06-05.
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