Charles Yale Harrison

Charles Yale Harrison (16 June 1898 17 March 1954) was a Canadian author and journalist, best known for his 1930 anti-war novella Generals Die in Bed.[1][2][3][4][5]

Background

Charles Yale Harrison was born in 1898 in Philadelphia and was raised in Montreal Canada, where at age fifteen he wrote his first short story.

Career

At age sixteen took an entry-level job with the Montreal Star newspaper. Harrison's journalistic career was pre-empted, however, when he enlisted with the 244th Overseas Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1917 to fight in World War I. After several months in a reserve battalion in England, Harrison transferred to the Royal Montreal Regiment and was sent to the Western Front.[2]

The climax of Harrison's war experience came on 8 August 1918 when he participated in the first day of the Battle of Amiens. Harrison was wounded in the foot and spent the rest of the war recuperating, before returning to Montreal. During the 1920s, Harrison managed a movie theatre before moving to New York City to pursue a career as a novelist, journalist, and public relations consultant. By 1928, serialized portions of Generals Die in Bed began to appear in several American and German periodicals. The same year, Harrison made headlines in The New York Times when he was arrested en route to Nicaragua, where he planned to interview the Nicaraguan dissident General Augusto César Sandino.

Literary career

In 1930, after such anti-war books as Robert Graves's Goodbye to All That, Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms, and Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front (all published in 1929) became bestsellers, publishers took an interest in Generals Die in Bed, many elements of which resembled the other books. Harrison, who was working as a copy editor on the Bronx Home News was propelled into the spotlight when Generals Die in Bed became an international bestseller, in part due to the controversy surrounding its depiction of Canadian soldiers looting the French town of Arras and shooting unarmed German soldiers.

Although he went on to publish several more novels, none of them matched the commercial success of Generals Die in Bed. More successful were his non-fiction writings, including a 1931 biography of lawyer Clarence Darrow and a 1949 memoir entitled Thank God For My Heart Attack, an early installment in the genre of self-help books.

In the early 1930s, Harrison was an editor of the New Masses communist literary magazine in New York City while under editor-in-chief Walt Carmon.[6][7][8][9][10]

Harrison's last novel, Nobody's Fool, was published in 1948.

Personal life and death

Harrison married three times; he was widowed in 1931, later remarried and divorced his second wife, and was survived by his third wife at his death. He was an uncle of novelist Judith Rossner, author of Looking for Mr. Goodbar.[11]

Suffering from the heart condition that inspired his self-help memoir, he died in 1954.[2]

Legacy

Columbia University has an archive of Harrison's papers, which include correspondence with: Whittaker Chambers, Clarence Darrow, Ruby Darrow, John Dos Passos, Max Eastman, Joseph Freeman, Mike Gold, Upton Sinclair, and Robert F. Wagner.[5]

Works

Poster for the WPA film First Houses (1936) for the New York City Housing Authority, with narrative by Charles Yale Harrison

Fiction

Non-Fiction

  • Next Please: The Story of Greco and Carillo (political pamphlet, 1927)
  • Clarence Darrow (biography, 1931)
  • Public Housing (series of pamphlets, 1937)
  • Labor Lawyer (ghostwritten autobiography of Louis Waldman, 1944)
  • Thank God For My Heart Attack (self-help, 1949)

References

  1. New, William H (2002), Encyclopedia of literature in Canada, University of Toronto, p. 475, ISBN 978-0-8020-0761-2
  2. "Charles Yale Harrison". Annick Press. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  3. "Charles Yale Harrison". Library and Archives Canada. 10 November 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  4. Moran, Rodger J. (16 December 2016). Charles Yale Harrison. Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  5. "Charles Yale Harrison Papers, 1920-1954". Columbia University. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  6. "New Masses" (PDF). New Masses. October 1931. Retrieved 22 October 2018. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. "New Masses" (PDF). New Masses. December 1931. Retrieved 22 October 2018. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. "New Masses" (PDF). New Masses. January 1932. Retrieved 22 October 2018. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. "New Masses" (PDF). New Masses. November 1932. Retrieved 22 October 2018. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. Wald, Alan M. (2002). Exiles From a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth Century Literary Left. University of North Carolina Press. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
  11. Rossner, Judith Louise. The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives. 2001. Retrieved 22 October 2018.
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