Paul George Vincent O'Shaughnessy Horgan (August 1, 1903 – March 8, 1995) was an American writer of historical fiction and non-fiction who mainly wrote about the Southwestern United States. He was the recipient of two Pulitzer Prizes for History.
Historian David McCullough wrote of Horgan in 1989: "With the exception of Wallace Stegner, no living American has so distinguished himself in both fiction and history."[1]
Biography
Paul Horgan was born in Buffalo, New York to a Catholic family[2] on August 1, 1903. After his father contracted tuberculosis, the family moved in 1915 to Albuquerque, New Mexico for health reasons. Horgan attended New Mexico Military Institute in Roswell, New Mexico, where he formed a lifelong friendship with classmate and future artist Peter Hurd.[3] Horgan befriended physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer in 1922 during a visit to New Mexico. After finishing high school, Horgan spent a year working for a local newspaper.[4]
In 1923, Horgan enrolled in the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, but dropped out after the first year. He worked for the next three years in Rochester as the set designer for a new opera company being started by tenor Vladimir Rosing. Although Horgan had never designed sets before, he convinced Rosing to give him the job. The fledgling opera company later became the American Opera Company.[4][5]
In 1924, Horgan returned to Albuquerque. He published his first novel, The Fault of Angels, about his experiences in Rochester in 1923; it won the Harper Prize. He continued to write 17 novels plus other works over the next five decades. Horgan served as president of the American Catholic Historical Association[6]
In 1959, Horgan became a fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. Over the next 35 years, he would serve as a director of CAS, an adjunct professor of English, and as a professor emeritus and permanent author-in-residence.[8][9][10][7] The author Charles Barber served as a personal assistant to Horgan when Barber was a college student. During this period, Horgan also taught seminars and workshops at Yale University and the University of Iowa.[7]
Horgan published 40 books and received 19 honorary degrees from universities in the United States. He received a papal knighthood from Pope Pius XII. Paul Horgan died at Middlesex County Hospital in Middletown, Connecticut, on March 8, 1995.[5]
Literary works
In 1970, Horgan started his "Heroic Triad" of novels, about the different cultures in the Southwest, with the publication of Whitewater. It was followed by Thin Mountain Air in 1977 and Mexico Bay in 1982.[12]
One of Horgan's most popular works was A Distant Trumpet, a historical novel based on the Apache wars in the Southwest. Horgan's 1972 book Encounters With Stravinsky, a biography of composer Igor Stravinsky, was called "an utterly irresistible book" by New York Times reviewer Simon Karlinsky.[7] In 1960, author Robert Franklin Gish praised Horgan's literary contributions in the monographPaul Horgan: Yankee Plainsmanand a few other works.[13]
Fiction
The Fault of Angels (1933)
No Quarter Given (1935)
The Return of the Weed (1936) short stories
Main Line West (1936)
A Lamp on the Plains (1937)
Far from Cibola (1938)
The Habit of Empire (1939)
Figures in the Landscape (1940)
The Common Heart (1942)
Devil in the Desert (1950)
Things As They Are (1951)
One Red Rose for Christmas (1952)
The Saintmaker's Christmas Eve (1955) (translated into German by Annemarie Böll as "Weihnachtsabend in San Cristobal")
Give Me Possession (1957)
A Distant Trumpet (1960)
Mountain Standard Time (1962) contains Main Line West, Far from Cibola, and The Common Heart
Toby and the Nighttime (1963) juvenile
Memories of the Future (1966)
The Peach Stone: Stories from Four Decades (1967) short stories
Everything to Live For (1968)
Whitewater (1970)
The Thin Mountain Air (1977)
Mexico Bay (1982)
The Clerihews of Paul Horgan (1985) light verse
The Richard Trilogy (1990) contains Things As they Are, Everything to Live For, and The Thin Mountain Air
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