Writers in Hollywood 1915-1951

Ian Hamilton

Out of stock

Format
Ebook
ISBN
9780571283712
Date Published
17.11.2011
Delivery
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Summary

Legend has it that Hollywood lures gifted writers into its service with sunshine and money, only to treat them as glorified typists and plot-mechanics, peripheral to the main business of moviemaking. This is what Ian Hamilton describes as ‘the writer-in-chains saga that emerges from any study of Hollywood during its so-called golden years – the period I have marked as running from 1915-1951.’

But in this superb account of what befell the likes of Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Chandler and Huxley by working for the Dream Factory, Hamilton argues that these writers ‘were in the movies by choice: they earned far more money than their colleagues who did not write for films, and in several cases they applied themselves conscientiously to the not-unimportant task at hand. And they had a lot of laughs…’

‘Fascinating and enjoyable.’ New Statesman
‘Abounds in marvelous stories, apocryphal, fabulous, funny and even true.’ Observer

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IanHamilton

Ian Hamilton was born in 1938, in King’s Lynn, Norfolk, and educated at Darlington Grammar School and Keble College, Oxford. In 1962, he founded the influential poetry magazine, the Review, and he was later editor of the New Review. He also wrote biographies and journalism, mainly about literature and football. He died in 2001.

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