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Saturday 29 November 2014

Some illustrators of Blue Book magazine

[Originally appeared in Blue Book, April 1938]
 
Who’s Who in Blue Book
 
 


Austin Briggs



 
He was born in a private car on a railway siding in Minnesota; for his father was an electrical engineer engaged in revising a telegraph system, and his wife traveled with him. . . . Later the family settled in Detroit, and there, Mr. Briggs won a scholarship in an art school that started him on his career as an illustrator. He moved to New York in 1928 and since that time his work has appeared in Collier’s, Pictorial Review and other magazines as well as in Blue Book. He is married and the father of two children—and is a table-tennis expert (heaven help you if he hears you call it ping-pong!) At the left is his own idea of what he looks like.
 
He lives at Norwalk, Conn., which was his birthplace. He got his training at the New York School of Art under William M. Chase and Edward Penfield, and was also a pupil of Frederick John. Besides his work as an illustrator he has designed several houses in the early American style, on which he is an authority, and has painted many landscapes. In the field of mural decoration an outstanding example of his work is a panel thirty-four feet long in the New Canaan Town Hall. At present he is assisting in the design of murals for the New York World’s Fair.


George Avison




Frederic Anderson



 
“I was born in 1894 in Cambridge, Mass.,” Mr. Anderson reports. “My parents were born in Finland. My father followed the sea. As a boy, I wanted to do the same, and my first drawings were of ships. I moved to Philadelphia, where I had my art training, and was graduated from the Industrial Arts School, and worked for some of the magazines. Enlisted in an illustrators’ unit—dissected, and drew operations for a year, making a medical history of the war! The armistice was signed, and I’d not got over. Painted some portraits of generals, and came on home, back to work for the magazines. Bought a farm in Chester Co., Penn., but am now located in New York, taking art as a vocation.”
 
Everyone calls him Pete, though that is not the name his parents gave him—he’s that kind of fellow. He was born in Emporia, Kansas, out where they raise tall corn and measure their men by the yard—he stands six feet, seven. He was graduated from the University of Missouri as an electrical engineer; and “before he went wrong” (his own phrase) he was a specialist in installing telephone systems. Since he came to New York his drawings and lithographs have won increasing recognition. He is an expert pistol-shot and a candid-camera addict.

Pete Kuhlhoff



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday 25 November 2014

Recent books I've enjoyed

This list shouldn't surprise anyone who hasn't been hiding in a cave all summer. Altus Press has been doing an excellent job reprinting some very good authors, many of whom have been featured on this site. I have linked to the Ebook editions which are an excellent deal at $2.99 each; the books are also available in paperback and hardback directly from Altus Press.










Saturday 22 November 2014

Charles B. Stilson - Author, Journalist



 

C. B. STILSON, NOVELIST AND EDITOR, DIES


Devoted Life to Work of Newspapers and to Literature


Charles B. Stilson, author
Charles B. Stilson, author
 
Charles Billings Stilson, in point of service one of the oldest newspaper men in Rochester and a fiction writer whose work had been published in far parts of the world, died unexpectedly early yesterday morning at his home, 2 Canary Street, aged 52 years.

Mr. Stilson was apparently in his usual health and spirits when at midnight he left his nook at The Democrat and Chronicle, where he was employed as copyreader. He evidently was seized with a sudden heart attack after arriving home and died before medical assistance could reach him.

The news of Mr. Stilson’s death shocked an unusually large circle of friends, many of whom had known him intimately from boy-hood. These admired him especially for his remarkably intense and active mind, his fund of anecdote and information, his rare conversational powers and his deft skill in a number of artistic hobbies. Fiction writing, which had enlisted his interest from school days, was only one of many pastimes. Of late years he had developed a genuine talent with the pencil and brush and some of his work passed as professional quality. He found time also to indulge a taste for carving, modeling and delicate cabinet work which won the admiration of skilled critics. He was an insatiable reader of fiction, and his mind was a storehouse of information covering almost the entire range of the short story and novel of various nations. It was customary for him to recall in detail plots and characters of stories read in his boyhood.

 

Colonial Ancestry

 

Mr. Stilson’s ancestors on both sides traced back to early Colonial days in this country. Among them were soldiers who won distinction in the Revolutionary War. Beyond that, his paternal ancestors had been traced back to kinship with members of the British nobility. His father was Charles Stilson of Albion and his mother, who died when Mr. Stilson was only 4 was Lottie Billings of East Carlton.

 

Mr. Stilson was born at Albion, October 3, 1880, attended the country schools of South Barre, Orleans County, and when 9 years old removed to Irondequoit with relatives. In 1896 he was graduated from No 14 School, Rochester, and entered the old Rochester Free Academy, which he attended for three years.

At 16, Mr. Stilson entered the newspaper field, in which the remainder of his life, with only a few minor interruptions, was to be spent. He began as a cub reporter on the Rochester Herald, filling in during vacation time. For one week, he was fond of saying, he was office boy on that newspaper. In the fall of 1896 he entered the proof room as copy holder, became proof reader and worked at that job for four and a half years. He digressed from this department long enough to take a three-month course in linotype operating in New York City and to work at that trade on the Herald for the next year and a half.

 

Enlisted in Army

 

By this time Mr. Stilson had won the interest of the late Louis M. Antisdale, managing editor of the Herald, and entered definitely into the editorial end of newspaper work. Subsequently, he was reporter, assistant city editor and city editor, assuming the last named position June 3, 1911, upon the resignation of the late Edgar F. Edwards. On Sept. 20, 1918, he left the city desk to enlist in the United States Army for service in the World War, being assigned to the Student Army Training Corps at the University of Rochester where he served until discharged in December of that year.

For the next four years Mr. Stilson devoted himself to fiction at Windburne, Pa., the former home of Mrs. Stilson, and while there turned out some of his most successful work. Novels and short stories came from his pen. His stories won tributes from many parts of the country and a number of his novels were published in England and Australia. His novels were “The Ace of Blades”, "The Island God Forgot,'' 'The Seven Blue Diamonds", ''The Cavalier of Navarre" and "Sword Play."

Mr. Stilson returned to Rochester in 1922 as literary editor on the Herald. In September 1926, he became copy reader on The Democrat and Chronicle.

 

Tireless Worker

 

Many newspaper men and other professional writers owe their early progress to the kindly help and sympathetic guidance of Mr. Stilson. He was especially interested in young reporters honestly eager to advance and to develop their taste for literature. His own capacity for protracted labor when absorbed in a story was a matter of merriment for his friends. It was not uncommon for him to work at his newspaper desk all day, then write fiction all night and be back at his desk as fresh as ever at the opening of the next working day. One of his earliest successes, a serial story called "Polaris," was written entirely in those odd hours between the end of one working day and the beginning of another. Most of the short stories of that period were written in the same way. Aside from this inexhaustible literary flow, he was a prodigious reader of any subject that interested him, and the “atmosphere"  which he created for many of his stories was so authentic as to deceive readers into the belief that he had been actually in contact with the life he pictured.

 
In his newspaper work Mr. Stilson had formed a wide acquaintance in various circles and his devotion to those whom he chose as friends was enduring and dependable. Many of these can cite instances of his unselfish and thoughtful nature, the influence of which remained long after the events that had prompted them. Although he had opportunities to enter other fields of work, the newspaper remained his first and only love, aside from those pursuits he regarded merely as hobbies. His exact information on events of the past, his extraordinary memory for details, and his painstaking care in the preparation and editing of copy were proverbial among his fellow workers.

Mr. Stilson was a life member of Rochester Lodge 660 F and A.M, a charter member of Lewis H. Morgan Chapter, New York State Archaeological Society, Rochester Typographical Union 15, Rochester Rotary Club and Memorial Post 104, American Legion.

He leaves his wife, Mrs. Rose M. Bloom Stilson, and two daughters, Dorothy Elizabeth Stinson of Toronto and Rita Fern Stinson of Rochester. The body was removed to the funeral parlor of Moore & Fiske, 106 Lake Avenue for funeral services tomorrow afternoon at 3 o’clock. The body will be cremated and the ashes buried in Mt. Albion Cemetery at Albion. The family requests that flowers be omitted.