James Albert Michener (; February 3, 1907 – October 16, 1997) was an
American author of more than 40 titles, the majority of which were sweeping sagas, covering the lives of many generations in particular geographic locales and incorporating historical facts into the stories. Michener was known for the meticulous research behind his work.
Michener's major books include Tales of the South Pacific (for which he won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1948), Hawaii, The Drifters, Centennial, The Source, The Fires of Spring, Chesapeake, Caribbean, Caravans, Alaska, Texas, and Poland. His nonfiction works include the 1968 Iberia about his travels in Spain and Portugal, his 1992 memoir The World Is My Home, and Sports in America. Return to Paradise combines fictional short stories with Michener's factual descriptions of the Pacific areas where they take place.
Biography
Michener wrote that he did not know who his biological parents were or exactly when or where he was born. and
summa cum laude in 1929 from
Swarthmore College in English and psychology, he traveled and studied in Europe for two years. Michener then took a job as a high school English teacher at Hill School in
Pottstown, Pennsylvania. From 1933 to 1936 he taught English at
George School, in
Newtown, Pennsylvania, then attended
Colorado State Teachers College (now the
University of Northern Colorado in
Greeley,
Colorado), earned his master's degree, and taught there for several years. The library at the University of Northern Colorado is named for him. In 1935 Michener married Patti Koon. He went to
Harvard for a one-year teaching stint from 1939 to 1940 and left teaching to join
Macmillan Publishers as their social studies education editor.
Michener was called to active duty during World War II in the United States Navy. He traveled throughout the South Pacific on various missions that were assigned to him because his base commanders thought he was the son of Admiral Marc Mitscher. His travels became the setting for his breakout work Tales of the South Pacific.
In 1960, Michener was chairman of the Bucks County committee to elect John F. Kennedy. In 1962, he unsuccessfully ran as a Democratic candidate for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, a decision he later considered a misstep. "My mistake was to run in 1962 as a Democratic candidate for Congress. [My wife] kept saying, 'Don't do it, don't do it.' I lost and went back to writing books." Michener was later Secretary for the 1967–68 Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention.
Education
Michener graduated from Doylestown High School in 1925. He attended
Swarthmore College, where he played
basketball, and joined the
Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He graduated with highest honors. He attended
Colorado State Teachers College (now named the
University of Northern Colorado in
Greeley,
Colorado), and earned his master's degree.
Writing career
Michener's writing career began during
World War II, when as a lieutenant in the
U.S. Navy, he was assigned to the
South Pacific Ocean as a naval historian;. He later turned his notes and impressions into
Tales of the South Pacific, his first book, published in 1947 when he was 40. It became the basis for the Broadway and film musical
South Pacific by
Rodgers and Hammerstein. Michener did lend his name to a different television series,
Adventures in Paradise, in 1959. In the late 1950s, Michener began working as a roving editor for
Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature. He gave up that work in 1970.
Michener was a popular writer during his lifetime; his novels sold an estimated 75 million copies worldwide. His novel Hawaii (published in 1959) was based on extensive research. Nearly all of his subsequent novels were based on detailed historical, cultural, and even geological research. Centennial, which documented several generations of families in the West, was made into a popular twelve-part television miniseries of the same name and aired on NBC from October 1978 through February 1979.
In 1996, State House Press published James A. Michener: A Bibliography, compiled by David A. Groseclose. Its more than 2,500 entries from 1923 to 1995 include magazine articles, forewords, and other works.
Michener's prodigious output made for lengthy novels, several of which run more than 1,000 pages. The author states in My Lost Mexico that at times he would spend 12 to 15 hours per day at his typewriter for weeks on end, and that he used so much paper his filing system had trouble keeping up.
Spouses
Michener was married three times. In 1935 he married Patti Koon. His second wife was Vange Nord (married in 1948). Michener met his third wife
Mari Yoriko Sabusawa at a luncheon in Chicago and they were married in 1955 (the same year as his divorce from Nord). His novel
Sayonara is quasi-autobiographical.
Charity
Michener gave away a great deal of the money he earned, contributing more than $100 million to universities, libraries, museums, and other charitable causes.
In 1989, Michener donated the royalty earnings from the Canadian edition of his novel Journey, published in Canada by McClelland & Stewart, to create the Journey Prize, an annual Canadian literary prize worth $10,000 (Cdn) that is awarded for the year's best short story published by an emerging Canadian writer.
Final years and death
In his final years, he lived in
Austin, Texas, and, aside from being a prominent celebrity fan of the
Texas Longhorns women's basketball team, he founded an
MFA program now named the
Michener Center for Writers.
In October 1997, Michener ended the daily dialysis treatment that had kept him alive for four years. He died on October 16 of kidney failure at the age of 90.
He was buried in Austin, Texas, and is honored by a monument at the Texas State Cemetery.
Michener left his entire $10 million estate (including the copyrights to his works) to Swarthmore College.
Tributes
On the evening of September 14, 1998, the
Raffles Hotel in Singapore named one of their suites after the illustrious author, in memory of his patronage and passion for the hotel. Michener first stayed at the Singapore hotel just after World War II in 1949, and in an interview a decade before his death he said it was a luxury for him, a young man, to stay at the Raffles Hotel back then, and had the time of his life. It was officially christened by Steven Green, then Ambassador of United States to Singapore, who noted the writer's penchant of describing 'faraway places with strange-sounding names' to his American book readers. His last stay was in 1985 when he came to Singapore for the launch of the book
Salute to Singapore, for which he wrote the foreword. He was so fond of his last stay in Raffles that he took the hotel room key home with him as a souvenir. The suite contains a selection of Michener's works, like
Caribbean,
The Drifters and
Hawaii, as well as two photographic portraits of the author taken at the hotel and in
Chinatown in 1985. After his death, the Michener estate corresponded with the hotel management to return the room key, and from there the idea to name the hotel room after him, came into fruition. The souvenir key was duly returned to the hotel, and now on display in the
Raffles Hotel Museum.
The Library at The University of Northern Colorado in Greeley, Colorado, his alma mater, is named The James Michener Library in his honour.
James A. Michener Art Museum
Opened in 1988 in Michener's hometown of
Doylestown, Pennsylvania, the James A. Michener Art Museum houses collections of local and well-known artists. The museum, constructed from the remains of an old prison, is a non-profit organization, with both permanent and rotating collections. Two prominent permanent fixtures are the James A. Michener display room and the Nakashima Reading Room, constructed in honor of his third wife's Japanese heritage. The museum is known for its permanent collection of Pennsylvania
Impressionist paintings.
Works
In addition to novels, Michener was very involved with non-fiction, movies, TV show series and radio. This is only a major part of what is listed in the Library of Congress files. The category list would be very complex to add.
Books — fiction
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Book Title!!Year Published
|-
|''
Tales of the South Pacific||1947
|-
|''
The Fires of Spring||1949
|-
|''
Return to Paradise||1950
|-
|''
The Bridges at Toko-ri||1953
|-
|''
Sayonara||1954
|-
|''
Hawaii||1959
|-
|''
Caravans||1963
|-
|''
The Source||1965
|-
|''
The Drifters||1971
|-
|''
Centennial||1974
|-
|''
Chesapeake||1978
|-
|''
The Watermen||1978
|-
|''
The Covenant||1980
|-
|''
Space||1982
|-
|''
Poland||1983
|-
|''
Texas||1985
|-
|
Legacy||1987
|-
|
Alaska||1988
|-
|
Caribbean||1989
|-
|
Journey||1989
|-
|
The Novel||1991
|-
|
South Pacific||1992
|-
|
Mexico||1992
|-
|
Recessional||1994
|-
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Miracle in Seville||1995
|-
|
Matecumbe||2007
|}
Books — non-fiction
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Book Title!!Year Published!!Notes
|-
|
The Voice of Asia||1951||
|-
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Rascals in Paradise ||1957||
|-
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The Future of the Social Studies ("The Problem of the Social Studies")||1939||
Editor
|-
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The Floating World||1954||
|-
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The Bridge at Andau||1957||
|-
|
Japanese Prints: From the Early Masters to the Modern||1959||With notes by
Richard Lane
|-
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Report of the County Chairman||1961||
|-
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The Modern Japanese Print: An Appreciation||1968||
|-
|
Iberia||1968|| Travelogue
|-
|
Presidential Lottery||1969||
|-
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The Quality of Life||1970||
|-
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Kent State: What Happened and Why||1971||
|-
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Michener Miscellany – 1950/1970 ||1973||
|-
|
Firstfruits, A Harvest of 25 Years of Israeli Writing||1973||
|-
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Sports in America||1976||
|-
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About Centennial: Some Notes on the Novel||1978||
|-
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James A Michener's USA: The People and the Land||1981||
|-
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||1983||
|-
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Michener Anthology||1985||
|-
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Six Days in Havana||1989||
|-
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Pilgrimage: A Memoir of Poland and Rome||1990||
|-
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The Eagle and the Raven||1990||
|-
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My Lost Mexico||1992
|-
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The World Is My Home||1992|| Autobiography
|-
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Creatures of the Kingdom||1993||
|-
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Literary Reflections||1993||
|-
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William Penn||1994||
|-
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Ventures in Editing||1995||
|-
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This Noble Land||1996||
|-
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Three Great Novels of World War II ||1996||
|-
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A Century of Sonnets||1997||
|-
|}
Adaptations
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Title!!Notes
|-
|
The Bridges at Toko-Ri||1953 film
|-
|
Return to Paradise||1953 film
|-
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Men of the Fighting Lady||1954 film
|-
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Until They Sail||1957 film based on a short story included in
Return to Paradise
|-
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Sayonara||1957 film nomoinated for 10 Academy Awards, won 4; including Best Supporting Actress, for
Miyoshi Umeki the first and as of 2010, the only East Asian Actress to win an Oscar.
|-
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South Pacific||1958 film
|-
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Adventures in Paradise||1959–1962 television series
|-
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Hawaii||1966 film
|-
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The Hawaiians||1970 film
|-
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Centennial||1978 TV miniseries
|-
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Caravans||1978 film starring
Anthony Quinn
|-
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Space||1985 TV miniseries
|-
|''
James A. Michener's Texas
|-
|
South Pacific||2001 television movie
|}
See also
List of bestselling novels in the United States
Edward Rutherfurd
References
Further reading
James A. Michener: A Biography, 1985.
James A. Michener: A Bibliography, 1996.
Michener and Me: A Memoir by Herman Silverman; hardcover 1999, paperback 2003. Memoir by a long-time friend of Michener.
Michener: A Writer's Journey, 2005.
External links
Published books with covers
James A. Michener Library at the University of Northern Colorado
James A. Michener Society
James A. Michener Special Collection: David A. Groseclose
James A. Michener Art Museum, Doylestown, PA
Michener Center for Writers
Michener: His Influence and Ethics by Edward Rutherfurd
Working with James A. Michener — The Making of The Covenant
Biographical Entry at the Texas State Cemetery
Category:1907 births
Category:1997 deaths
Category:People from Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Category:American adoptees
Category:American novelists
Category:American Quakers
Category:American memoirists
Category:American sportswriters
Category:American military personnel of World War II
Category:Writers from Colorado
Category:Writers from Pennsylvania
Category:People from Greeley, Colorado
Category:Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients
Category:Pulitzer Prize for Fiction winners
Category:Texas Longhorns women's basketball
Category:United States Navy officers
Category:Swarthmore College alumni
Category:Writers from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Category:Burials at Texas State Cemetery