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Zane Grey (1872-1939) - original name Pearl Grey

 

Prolific American writer and pioneer of Western as a new literary genre. Zane Grey produced over sixty books during his career. He presented the West as a moral battle ground, in which his characters are redeemed through a final confrontation with their past or destroyed because of their inability to change. Grey's semioutlaw heroes were his most interesting creations, among them Lassiter in RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE (1912), a gunman who has lost a girl he loved to a Mormon preacher, and Buck Duane, the agonized killer of LONE STAR RANGER (1915). Randolph Scott played a former outlaw in Fritz Lang's film Western Union (1941), based on the novel. Grey's stories, set against the beautiful but harsh landscape of the West, have fascinated readers all over the world.

"Slingerland hated the railroad, and he could not see as Neale did, or any of the engineers or builders. This old trapper had the vision of the Indian - that far-seeing eye cleared by distance and silence, and the force of the great, lonely hills. Progress was great, but nature unspoiled was greater. If a race could not breed all stronger men, through its great movements, it might better not breed any, for the bad over-multiplied the good, and so their needs magnified into greed. Slingerland saw many shiningbands of steel across the plains and mountains, many stations and hamlets and cities, a growing and marvelous prosperity from timber, mines, farms, and in the distant end - a gutted West." (from The Roaring U.P. Trail, 1918)

Zane Grey was born in Zanesville, Ohio. His father was a farmer and preacher, and mother Quaker, of Danish background. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in dentistry in 1896, Grey practiced in New York City until 1904. During these years he started to write. Grey's first book, BETTY ZANE, was turned down by several publishers. The colorful frontier story, based on his ancestor's journal, was privately printed in 1904. The book gained a critical success and Grey continued his family story in THE SPIRIT OF THE BORDER (1905).

In 1908 Grey made a journey to the West with Colonel C.J. ('Buffalo') Jones, who told him tales of adventure on the plains. The trip was a turning point in Grey's career. He began writing Western novels in the tradition of Owen Wister and produced the first, THE LAST OF THE PLAINSMEN, in 1908. In his writing Grey was encouraged by his wife, Lina Elise Roth; they married in 1905. She supported his aspirations to become a professional writer.

The publishing company Harpers brought out Riders of the Purple Sage in 1912. It sold two million copies, was filmed three times, and became Grey's best-known western. The central character is an enterprising woman, Jane Witherspoon, a rich Mormon. "Trouble between the Mormons and the Gentiles of the community would make her unhappy. She was Mormon-born, and she was a friend of to poor and unfortunate Gentiles. She wished only to go on doing good and being happy. And she thought of what that great ranch meant to her. She loved it all - the grove of cottonwoods, the old stone house, the amber-tinted water, and the droves of shaggy, dusty horses and mustangs, the sleek, clean-limbed, blooded racers, and the browsing herds of cattle and the lean, sun-browned riders of the sage." She finds protection for her ranch and herself from an mysterious hero, Lassiter, who hates Mormons for his own reasons. This formula, in which a tormented outlaw fights to protect the good and finds love, Grey used in many novels.

JUDKINS: My name is Judkins. I don't know you, but I know... I've heard what you are... I heard you killed some men in the North.
LASSITER: Not just in the North.

(from the 1996 film Riders of the Purple Sage, dir. by Charles Haid)

Much of Grey's knowledge of the West was based on research or trips in the regions he wrote about. He also interviewed authentic residents of the Wild West. In 1918 Grey moved to California, and lived there for the rest of his life. He built a large, Spanish-style house in Altadena, and continued to produce the usual 100 000 words each month.

Grey's non-fiction includes several tales of fishing. In TALES OF SWORDFISH AND TUNA (1927) Grey tells that he had exceptionally good luck in locating schools of large tuna. While not writing, Grey fished in the South Seas, or hunted along the Rogue River in Oregon, or spent time on Catalina Island. According to some sources, he fished up to 300 days of the year. Grey died on October 23, 1939, in Altadena. Several of Grey's novels have been published posthumously, among others THE REEF GIRL in 1977.

Grey's favorite subjects were settlers, cowboys, desperadoes, Indians, cattle drives, the advance of technology, family feuds, feuds between cattlemen and sheepherders, the bison hunting (The Thundering Herd), the defeat of the American Indian - all the aspects of West that later generations of writers and filmmakers have utilized. His style has been called antiquated, but it had much emotional power: "Memory stirred to the sight of the familiar corner. He had been in several bad gun fights in this town, and the scene of one of them lay before him. The warmth and intimacy of old pleasant associations suffered a chill." (from Sunset Pass, 1931) THE ROARING U.P. TRAIL (1918) has been criticized for its melodramatic plot but acknowledged for its reliable historical description about the building of the transcontinental railroad.

THE VANISHING AMERICAN (1925) recycled the idea of the noble savage familiar from The Last of the Mohicans or from the works of Jean Jacques Rousseau. The social commentary on the treatment of American Indians on the reservation included also a love theme between the red man and white woman. George B. Seitz's movie version from 1925 was melodramatic but dramatized the progression of American Indian life, and their hopeless situation in a way that no film previously had attempted. "Promises from the white establishment reek hypocrisy: "We will help you live as white men live. We will teach you to farm, to turn the desert into green fields." Yet the start of the twentieth century finds the Indians living meagerly on inadequate reservations." (from Great Hollywood Westerns by Ted Sennett, 1990) In such short stories as 'The Great Slave,' 'Yaqui, and 'Tigre' Grey showed his knowledge of Indian tribes and their history and the peon system of Mexican plantations. In 'Tappan's Burro,' about a wandering gold prospector and his faithful burro, Grey masterfully described the beauty of desert plains, barren mountain country, and forest land.

"Madge's sombre eyes gazed out over the great void. But, full of thought and passion as they were, they did not see the beauty of that scene. But Tappan saw it. And in some strange sense the colour and wilderness and sublimity seemed the expression of a new state in his heart. Under him sheered down the ragged and cracked cliffs of the Rim, yellow and gold and grey, full of caves and crevices, ledges for eagles and niches for lions, a thousand feet down to the upward edge of the long green slopes and canyons, and so on down and down into the abyss of forested ravine and ridge, rolling league on league away to the encompassing barrier of purple mountain ranges." (from 'Tappan's Burro')

From the beginning, Paramount used Grey's name as a draw. Wanderer of the Wasteland (1924), a silent film directed by Irvin Willat, was the first screen western shot entirely in color. In the 1930s lowbudget Zane Grey movies were highly popular and profitable for Paramount. The Thundering Herd (1933), which dealt with buffalo hunters and marauding Indians, is considered one of the best Zane Grey quickies. Footage from William K. Howard's film from 1925 was used in the scene of the stampede of wagons across a frozen lake. According to one estimation, about 100 Western films have been based on Grey's stories. Grey also wrote two screenplays, THE VANISHING PIONEER and RANGLE RIVER.

In the early phase of his career as a director, Henry Hathaway leant on Grey and the actor Randolph Scott, but by 1935 both Hathaway and Scott were on their way to bigger productions. Heritage of the Desert (1932) was Scott's first starring role. In Wild Horse Mesa (1932), a tale of wild horse taming, Scott stopped Fred Kohler who trapped wild stallions with barbed wire. Under the Tonto Rim (1933) depicted a slow-witted cowboy who wins his manhood and the boss's daughter. In the romantic Western Man of the Forest (1933) Scott's pet lion helps him to escape from jail. To the Last Man (1933), in which Shirley Temple made her debut, was a story of a family feud healed by young love . There is also a 'tastefully photographed' nude swimming sequence. The Last Round-Up (1934), starring Randolph Scott, was based on Zane Gray's novel THE BORDER LEGION. It told a story about a gang of rustlers and their boss who sacrifices his life for two young lovers. Stock footage from the silent version and Border Legion (1930) were used in the film. Fritz Lang's Western Union (1941) was beautifully photographed by Edward Cronjager.

For further reading: Zane Grey: A Biography by Frank Gruber (1969); Zane Grey by C. Jackson (1973); Zane Grey by A. Ronald (1975); Zane Grey by Carol Gay (1979); Zane Grey's Arizona by Candace C. Kant (1984); Zane Grey: A Photographic Odyssey by L. Grey (1985); Zane Grey, A Documented Portrait by G.M. Farley (1985); Selling the Wild West by Christine Bold (1987); West of Everything by Jane Tompkins (1992) - Other films (not listed below) based of Zane Grey's stories: Arizona Mahoney, 1936 (based on 'Stairs of Sand'); The Dude Ranger, 1934; The Yukon Patrol, 1942, dir. by William Withey (based on King of the Royal Mounted) - Trivia: Colonel Potter of the television series M*A*S*H frequently noted that his favorite writer was Zane Grey. - Other classic western writers: Louis L´Amour, Owen Wister, Frederick Marryat

Selected works:

  • BETTY ZANE, 1904 - suom.
  • THE SPIRIT OF BORDER, 1905 - Rajaseudun henki
  • LAST OF THE PLAINSMEN, 1908
  • THE LAST TRAIL, 1909 - films: 1921, starring Maurice Flynn; 1927, starring Tom Mix; 1933, dir. by James Tinling
  • NASSAU, CUBA, YUCATAN, MEXICO, 1909
  • THE SHORT STOP, 1909
  • THE YOUNG FORESTER, 1910
  • HERITAGE OF THE DESERT, 1910 - films: 1924, dir. by Irvin Willat; Heritage of the Desert (aka: When the West Was Young), 1932, dir. by Henry Hathaway, starring Randolph Scott; remade in 1939, dir. by Leslie Selander
  • THE YOUNG PITCHER, 1911
  • THE YOUNG LION HUNTER, 1911
  • KEN WARD IN THE JUNGLE, 1912
  • RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE, 1912 - Purppurarinteiden ratsastajat - films: 1918 with William Farnum; 1925 with Tom Mix; 1931, dir. by Hamilton McFadden, starring George O'Brien; 1941, dir. by James Tingling; starring George Montgomery; 1996, dir. by Charles Haid, starring Ed Harris, Amy Madigan, Henry Thomas, G.D. Spradlin
  • DESERT GOLD, 1913 - Erämaan kultaa - film: 1936, dir. by James Hogan
  • THE LIGHT OF THE WESTERN STARS, 1914 - films: 1919, starring Dustin Farnum; 1925, dir. by William A. Howard; 1930, dir. by Otto Brower; 1940, dir. by Lesley Selander
  • THE RUSTLERS OF THE PECOS COUNTRY, 1914
  • THE LONE STAR RANGER, 1915 - Yksinäisen tähden harhailija - films: 1929, dir. by George O'Brien; 1942, dir. by James Tinling, starring John Kimbrought
  • THE RAINBOW TRAIL, 1915 - film: 1932, dir. by David Howard, sequel to Riders of the Purple Sage
  • THE BORDER LEGION, 1916 - films: 1930, dir. by Otto Brower; The Last Roundup, 1934 - dir. by Henry Hathaway; 1940, dir. by Joseph Kane
  • WILDFIRE, 1917 - film: Red Canyon, 1949, dir. by George Sherman
  • THE DESERT WHEAT, 1918
  • THE U.P. TRAIL, 1918
  • TALES OF FISHES, 1919
  • THE MAN OF THE FOREST, 1920 - films: 1921; 1926; 1933, dir. by Henry Hathaway, starring Randolph Scott
  • THE RED-HEADED OUTFILED, 1920
  • THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER, 1921 - Salaperäinen ratsastaja - film: 1932, dir. by Fred Allen
  • THE CALL OF THE CANYON, 1921- Kanjonin kutsu - film: 1942, dir. by Joseph Santley, starring Gene Autry
  • TALES OF LONELY TRAILS, 1922
  • TO THE LAST MAN, 1922 - films: 1933, dir. by Henry Hathaway, starring Radolph Scott; 1935, dir. by David Howard; Thunder Mountain, 1947, dir. by Lew Landers, starring Tim Holt
  • THE DAY OF THE BEAST, 1922
  • WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND, 1923 - films: 1924, dir. by Irvin Willat; 1935, dir. by Otho Lovering
  • TAPPAN'S BURRO, 1923
  • THE CALL OF THE CANYON, 1924
  • ROPING LIONS IN THE GRAND CANYON, 1924
  • TALES OF SOUTHERN RIVERS, 1924
  • THE THUNDERING HERD, 1925 - films: silent version 1925, dir. by William K. Howard; 1933, dir. by Henry Hathaway, starring Randolph Scott
  • TALES OF FISHING, 1925
  • THE VANISHING AMERICAN, 1925 - films: 1925; dir. by George B. Seiz, starring Richard Dix; 1955, dir. by Joseph Kane
  • TALES OF THE ANGLER'S ELDORADO - NEW ZEALAND, 1926
  • UNDER THE TONTO RIM, 1926 - films: 1933, dir. by Henry Hathaway; 1947, dir. by Lew Landers
  • TALES OF SWORDFISH AND TUNA, 1927
  • FORLORN RIVER, 1927 - films: silent film 1929, dir. by John Waters; Fornlorn River (aka: River of Destiny), 1937, dir. by Charles Barton
  • NEVADA, 1928
  • WILD HORSE MESA, 1928 - films: 1932, dir. by Henry Hathaway, starring Randolph Scott; remade 1947, dir. by Wallace A. Grissell
  • TALES OF FRESH-WATER FISHING, 1928
  • DON: THE STORY OF A LION DOG, 1928
  • FIGHTING CARAVANS, 1929 - films: Fighting Caravans (aka: Blazing Arrows), 1931, dir. by Otto Bower and David Burton, starring Gary Cooper; Wagon Wheels, dir. by Charles Barton, starring Randolph Scott
  • THE SHEPHERD OF GUADELOUPE, 1930
  • THE WOLF TRACKER, 1930
  • SUNSET PASS, 1931 - films: 1933, dir. by Henry Hathaway, starring Randolph Scott; remade in 1946, dir. by William Berke
  • TALES OF TAHITIAN WATERS, 1931
  • ZANE GREY'S BOOK OF CAMPS AND TRAILS, 1931
  • ARIZONA AMES, 1932 - film: Thunder Trail, 1937, dir. by Charles Barton
  • ROBBER'S ROOST, 1932 - film: 1933, dir. by Louis King, starring George O'Brien and Maureen O'Sullivan, screenplay by Dudley Nichols who wrote John Ford's classical Western Stagecoach (1939)
  • THE DRIFT FENCE, 1933
  • THE HASH KNIFE OUTFIT, 1933
  • CODE OF THE WEST, 1934 - film: Home on the Range, 1935, dir. by Arthur Jacobson, starring Randolph Scott
  • THUNDER MOUNTAIN, 1935 - films: 1935, dir. by David Howard; 1947. dir. by Lew Landers
  • THE TRAIL DRIVER, 1936
  • THE LOST WAGON TRAIN, 1936
  • KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED, 1936-46 (7 vols.)
  • WEST OF THE PECOS, 1937 - film 1945, dir. by Ed Killy, starring Robert Mitchum
  • AN AMERICAN ANGLER IN AUSTRALIA, 1937
  • RIDERS OF SPANISH PEAKS, 1938 - film: The Arizona Raiders, 1936
  • , dir. by James P. Hogan
  • MAJESTY'S RANCHO, 1938
  • WESTERN UNION, 1939 - film: 1941, dir. by Friz Lang, starring Randolph Scott and Robert Young
  • KNIGHTS OF THE RANGE, 1939 - film: 1940, dir. by Lesley Selander
  • 30,000 ON THEW HOOF, 1940
  • TWIN SOMBREROS, 1941 - film: The Gunfighters (aka: The Assassin), 1947, dir. by George Waggoner, starring Randolph Scott
  • ZANE GREY OMNIBUS, 1943
  • STAIRS OF SAND, 1943
  • WILDERNESS TREK, 1944
  • SHADOW ON THE TRAIL, 1946
  • VALLEY OF THE WILD HORSES. 1947
  • ROGUE RIVER FEUD, 1948
  • THE DEER STALKER, 1949
  • THE MAVERICK QUEEN, 1950 - film: 1956, dir. by Joseph Kane, starring Barbara Stanwyck
  • THE DUDE RANGER, 1951
  • CAPTIVE OF THE DESERT, 1952
  • ZANE GREY'S ADVENTURES IN FISHING, 1952
  • WYOMING, 1953
  • LOST PUEBLO, 1954
  • BLACK MESA, 1955
  • STRANGER FROM TONTO, 1956
  • THE FUGITIVE TRAIL, 1957
  • THE ARIZONA CLAN, 1958
  • HORSE HEAVEN HILL, 1959
  • THE RANGER, 1960
  • THE RANGER AND OTHER STORIES, 1960
  • BLUE FEATHER AND OTHER STORIES, 1961
  • BOULDER DAM, 1963
  • ZANE GREY OUTDOORSMAN, 1972
  • THE ADVENTURE OF FINSPOT, 1974
  • ZANE GREY'S GREATEST WESTERN STORIES, 1975
  • ZANE GREY'S GREATEST INDIAN STORIES, 1975
  • ZANE GREY'S GREATEST ANIMAL STORIES, 1975
  • YAQUI AND OTHER INDIAN STORIES, 1976
  • SHARK!, 1976
  • THE BUFFALO HUNTER, 1977
  • LOST IN THE NEVER NEVER AND SILVERMANE, 1977
  • THE REEF GIRL, 1977
  • THE WESTENER, 1977
  • SAVAGE KINGDOM, 1979
  • ZANE GREY'S TALES FROM THE FISHERMAN'S LOG, 1979
  • RIDERS OF VENGEANCE, 1981
  • THE LAST OF THE DUANES, 1983
  • THE UNDISCOVERED ZANE GREY FISHING STORIES, 1983
  • THE WOLF TRACKER AND OTHER ANIMAL TALES, 1984
  • ZANE GREY: A PHOTOGRAPHIC ODYSSEY, 1985 (text by Loren Grey)
  • SHARK: KILLER OF THE DEEP, 1987
  • TIGRE AND OTHER STORIES, 1988
  • AVALANCHE AND OTHER STORIES, 1988
  • THE CAMP ROBBER AND OTHER STORIES, 1990
  • SILVERMANE AND OTHER STORIES, 1991

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