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Pat Frank

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Pat Frank (May 5, 1907October 12, 1964) is the pen name of the American writer, newspaperman, and government consultant Harry Hart. Frank's most well-known work is the 1959 post-apocalyptic novel Alas, Babylon. His other books include Mr. Adam and Forbidden Area

Biography

Frank was born in Chicago in 1907. Frank spent many years as a journalist and information handler for several newspapers, agencies, and government bureaus.[1] During his early career, he lived mainly in Florida apart from a couple of years in New York and Washington (and service overseas during World War II, when he worked for the Office of War Information and was a correspondent in Italy, Austria, Germany, and Turkey).[2]

Works

All men are sterile in Mr. Adam (1946), Frank's first published work. His other novels include Hold Back the Night, An Affair of State, and Forbidden Area. Frank's experiences reporting on the Korean conflict are described in his autobiographical travelogue The Long Way Round and influenced Hold Back the Night. Frank wrote his most popular work, the post-apocalyptic novel Alas, Babylon, while living in Tangerine, Florida, on Lake Beauclaire near Mount Dora. Vivian Owens, an author familiar with local history, states that "Pistolville," the name Frank gave to an area near Fort Repose in the novel, was in fact a location situated just between the southern edge of Mount Dora to its north and Tangerine to its south.[3] According to Owens, greater Mount Dora was intended by Frank to be the model for his semi-fictional Fort Repose.[4] Frank received the American Heritage Foundation Award in 1961.

References

  1. ^ Pat Frank from HarperCollins Publishers
  2. ^ Pat Frank Biography at The New York Times
  3. ^ Owens, Vivian W. The Mount Dorans: African American History Notes of a Florida Town. Waynesboro: Eschar, 2000.
  4. ^ "Alas, Babylon: Mount Dora, Florida." Everything2.com. 18 Oct. 2006. 18 Oct. 2006 <http://everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1226500>.

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Pat Frank from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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