Baynard Kendrick

Baynard Hardwick Kendrick (April 8, 1894 – March 22, 1977) was an American mystery novelist. He wrote whodunit novels about Duncan Maclain, a blind private investigator who worked with his two German shepherds and his household of assistants to solve murder mysteries. The novels were the basis for two films starring Edward Arnold, Eyes in the Night[1] (1942) and The Hidden Eye[2] (1945). Kendrick was credited by Stirling Silliphant for being the source of the Longstreet character about a blind insurance investigator. He also wrote using the pseudonym Richard Hayward.

Baynard Hardwick Kendrick
Born(1894-04-08)April 8, 1894
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died(1977-03-22)March 22, 1977
Ocala, Florida
OccupationAuthor
NationalityAmerican
GenreMystery
SpouseEdythe Stevens,
Jean Morris

Biography

Kendrick was born in Philadelphia and traveled to Canada as the first American citizen to enlist in the Canadian Army during World War I.[3] He served in England, France, and Salonika. During his service, a fellow Philadelphian serving with the Canadians was blinded. When Kendrick visited him at St Dunstan's he met a blind English soldier who had a remarkable ability to tell him things about himself that a sighted person may not have noticed.[4] The Tommy fingered Kendrick's buttons, uniform and insignia and accurately and rapidly stated Kendrick's war service record.[5]

Following the war, Kendrick sold his first story to Field and Stream magazine while earning his living at Bin and Big's Hotels in New York. In 1931 he was let go from the company a week before Christmas and, vowing never again to work for an employer, began supporting himself by writing. After three books Kendrick started writing for pulp magazines, which paid well.[6]

Kendrick's writing reflected two personal interests that he had developed: an interest in blind people and their coping skills and an interest in the history of Florida.

During World War II, Kendrick served as an instructor for blinded veterans giving him the material for his book Lights Out.

His novel Out of Control was adapted to an episode of the radio thriller series Suspense in 1946, featuring Brian Donlevy as Duncan Maclain.

The true story behind Kendrick's 1959 Hot Red Money was the basis for John Barron's Operation SOLO: The FBI's Man in the Kremlin.[7]

Kendrick was one of the founders of the Mystery Writers of America, held its first membership card,[8] and was its first president.

He died in 1977.

Duncan Maclain novels

Novels in the Duncan Maclain series:[9]

  • The Last Express (1937). Filmed. As The Last Express for Universal (1938).
  • The Whistling Hangman (1937)
  • Odor of Violets (1941) (aka Eyes in the Night). Filmed as Eyes in the Night in 1942. First published as a newspaper serial in 1941 as The Odor of Violets
  • Blind Man's Bluff (1943). First published as a newspaper serial in 1942
  • Death Knell (1945). First published as a newspaper serial in 1945 as Private Investigator Maclain (1945)
  • Out of Control (1945)
  • Make Mine Maclain (three novelets) (1947)
  • The Murderer Who Wanted More (Dell Ten-Cent edition, 1951, one of the three novelets from Make Mine Maclain, q.v.)
  • You Die Today (1952)
  • Blind Ally (1954). First published as a newspaper serial in 1954
  • Clear and Present Danger (1958). First published as a newspaper serial in 1958
  • Reservations for Death (1958). First published as a newspaper serial in 1956
  • The Aluminum Turtle (1960) (aka The Spear Gun Murders). First published as a newspaper serial in 1960
  • Frankincense and Murder (1961). First published as a newspaper serial in 1961

Miles Standish Rice novels

  • The Eleven of Diamonds (1936) New York: Greenburg.
  • The Iron Spiders (1936) (aka The Iron Spiders Murder) New York: Greenburg.
  • Death Beyond the Go-Thru (1938) New York: Doubleday, Doran.

Non-series novels

  • Blood on Lake Louisa (1934) New York: Greenburg.
  • Flames of Time (1948) New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • The Tunnel (1949)
  • Trapped (1952) (under the pseudonym of Richard Hayward)
  • They Never Talk Back (1954). Novel by Henry Trefflich, "as told to Baynard Kendrick"
  • The Soft Arms of Death (1954) (under the pseudonym of Richard Hayward)
  • Hot Red Money (1959). First published as a newspaper serial in 1959
  • Flight from a Firing Wall (1966) New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Lights Out (1945) New York: William Morrow. Filmed as Bright Victory (1951)

Other books

  • Orlando: A Century Plus (1976)

Short stories

  • The Hard Way. Chicago Tribune, 3 January 1943
  • The Murderer Who Wanted More. American Magazine, January 1944
  • Melody in Death. American Magazine, June 1945
  • The Perfect Murder (1947) (Maclain). Also published as The Case of the Perfect Murder Scheme
  • Minus Four Equals Murder (1954)
  • Hotel in the Hammock (1956)
  • The Cloth of Gold Murders. American Magazine, January 1956
  • Silent Night. Sleuth Mystery Magazine, December 1958; Murder For Christmas, 1982, Volume 2
  • The Silent Whistle

Articles

  • Florida's 'Most Vulnerable' Spot. Tampa Tribune, 5 February 1961
  • Jose Met His Match. Tampa Tribune, 12 February 1961
  • Those Bass Were Bigger in 1908!. Tampa Tribune, 19 February 1961
  • No Whiskey in the White House!. Tampa Tribune, 26 February 1961
  • Over the Mudholes in a Maxwell. Tampa Tribune, 5 March 1961
  • The Near Death of a Salesman. Tampa Tribune, 12 March 1961
  • He Changed His Name to Yule. Tampa Tribune, 19 March 1961
  • Blue-Nosed Reformer and His Sinful Paradise. Tampa Tribune, 26 March 1961
  • WA Bowles - Florida's Uncrowned King. Tampa Tribune, 16 April 1961
  • The Slave Trader with an African Wife. Tampa Tribune, 23 April 1961
  • The Costly Seminole War over Stray Slaves. Tampa Tribune, 30 April 1961
  • That Riotous Hunting Trip to Gulf Hammock. Tampa Tribune, 7 May 1961
  • Daniel McGirth and His Horse Gray Goose. Tampa Tribune, 14 May 1961
  • Florida Banks Crashed in Earlier Boom Too. Tampa Tribune, 21 May 1961
  • When Sidney J Catts Went Republican. Tampa Tribune, 11 June 1961
  • Bubbling Tourist Trade on the St John's River. Tampa Tribune, 18 June 1961
  • 'Wreck Ashore!' The Cry that Wrecked Key West. Tampa Tribune, 25 June 1961
  • How Governor Duval Bearded an Indian Chief. Tampa Tribune, 2 July 1961
  • A Black-Hearted Pair - Blackbeard and Caesar. Tampa Tribune, 17 September 1961
  • Chactaws Took Good Care of Aged Ill. Tampa Tribune, 12 August 1962
  • Patrick Speaks on 'Mobile Frontier'. Tampa Tribune, 6 January 1963
  • An Election Day Threat Shot down in Ambush in the Wild and Wooley Days. Tampa Tribune, 3 November 1968

Further reading

  • John Barron (1996), Operation SOLO: The FBI's Man in the Kremlin, Washington, Regnery.

References

  1. IMDB page accessed March 24, 2008
  2. IMDB page accessed March 24, 2008
  3. p.164 Baker, Robert Allen & Nietzel, Michael T. Private Eyes: One Hundred and One Knights 1985 Popular Press
  4. p.216 Jones, Robert Kenneth The Shudder Pulps 1975 Fax Collectors Editions
  5. p.311 Koestler, Frances A. The Unseen Minority: A History of Blindness in the United States 1976 D. MacKay Company
  6. p.217 Allen & Nietzel
  7. John Barron (1996), Operation SOLO: The FBI's Man in the Kremlin, Washington: Regnery.
  8. p.164 Baker & Nietzel
  9. Hubin, Allen J. Crime Fiction, 1749-1980: A comprehensive bibliography. New York and London, Garland Publishing. 1980. ISBN 0-8240-9219-8
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.