William Riley Burnett (November 25, 1899 – April 25, 1982) was an American novelist and screenwriter. He is best known for the crime novel Little Caesar, the film adaptation of which is considered the first of the classic American gangster movies.
Early life
Burnett was born in Springfield, Ohio, and attended Miami Military Institute in Germantown, Ohio. He left his civil service job in Springfield to move to Chicago when he was 28, by which time he had written over 100 short stories and five novels, all unpublished.
Writing career
In Chicago, Burnett found a job as a night clerk in the seedy Northmere Hotel. He found himself associating with prize fighters, hoodlums, hustlers and hobos. They inspired Little Caesar (novel 1929, film 1931). The novel's overnight success landed him a job as a Hollywood screenwriter. Little Caesar became a classic movie, produced by First National Pictures (Warner Brothers) and starring then little known Edward G. Robinson. Burnett returned to the Al Capone theme in 1932 with Scarface. He won the 1930 O. Henry Award for his short story "Dressing-Up", published in Harper's in November 1929.
Burnett published a novel or more a year and turned most into screenplays (some as many as three times). Thematically[citation needed] Burnett was similar to Dashiell Hammett and James M. Cain, but contrasting the corruption and corrosion of the city with the better life his characters yearned for. He portrayed characters who, for one reason or another, fell into a life of crime and were unable to climb out. They typically get one last shot at salvation but the oppressive system closes in and denies redemption.
In High Sierra (1941), Humphrey Bogart plays Roy Earle, a hard-bitten criminal who rejects his life of crime to help a sexually appealing crippled girl. In The Asphalt Jungle (1950), the most perfectly masterminded plot falls apart as each character reveals a weakness. In The Beast of the City (1932) starring Walter Huston, the police take the law into their own hands when the criminals walk free due to legal incompetence.
Later years
In later years, with his vision declining, he stopped writing and turned to promoting his earlier work. On his death in 1982, in Santa Monica, California,[3] Burnett was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
Critical reception
Heywood Broun described Burnett's novel Goodbye to the Past as "written with all the excitement of Little Caesar, and ten times the skill".[4]
Works
Novels
Little Caesar (under pen name Lincoln MacVeagh/The Dial Press - 1929)
Iron Man (Lincoln MacVeagh/The Dial Press - 1930)
Saint Johnson (Lincoln MacVeagh/The Dial Press - 1930)
The Silver Eagle (Lincoln MacVeagh/The Dial Press - 1931)
The Beast of the City (Grosset & Dunlap - 1932) [not properly a Burnett novel; credit on the book reads "novelized by Jack Lait, from the screen story by W.R. Burnett"; the book was published concurrently with the release of the M-G-M film, circa March 1932]
The Giant Swing (Harper - 1932)
Dark Hazard (Harper - 1933)
Goodbye to the Past: Scenes from the Life of William Meadows (Harper - 1934)
The Goodhues of Sinking Creek (Harper - 1934)
Dr. Socrates (O'Bryan House Publishing LLC - 2007) [Originally serialized in Colliers Weekly Magazine in 1935]
King Cole (Harper - 1936)
The Dark Command: A Kansas Iliad (Knopf - 1938)
High Sierra (Knopf - 1941)
The Quick Brown Fox (Knopf - 1943)
Nobody Lives Forever (Knopf - 1943)
Tomorrow's Another Day (Knopf - 1946)
Romelle (Knopf - 1947)
The Asphalt Jungle (Knopf - 1949)
Stretch Dawson (Gold Medal - 1950). The film Yellow Sky (1948) was based on an early version of the novel.
Little Men, Big World (Knopf - 1952)
Adobe Walls: A Novel of the Last Apache Rising (Knopf - 1953)
Vanity Row (Knopf - 1952)
Big Stan (Gold Medal - 1953) - written under pseudonym "John Monahan"
Captain Lightfoot (Knopf - 1954)
It's Always Four O'Clock (Random House - 1956) - written under pseudonym "James Updyke"
Pale Moon (Knopf - 1956)
Underdog (Knopf - 1957)
Bitter Ground (Knopf - 1958)
Mi Amigo: A Novel of the Southwest (Knopf - 1959)
Conant (Popular Library - 1961)
Round the Clock at Volari's (Gold Medal - 1961)
The Goldseekers (Doubleday - 1962)
The Widow Barony (Macdonald - 1962)
The Abilene Samson (Pocket Books - 1963)
Sergeants 3 (Pocket Books - 1963)
The Roar of the Crowd: Conversations with an Ex-Big-Leaguer (C.N. Potter - 1964)
The Winning of Mickey Free (Bantam Pathfinder - 1965)
The Cool Man (Gold Medal - 1968)
Good-bye, Chicago: 1928: End of an Era (St. Martin's - 1981)
Short stories
Round Trip (1929)
Dressing-Up (1930)
Travelling Light (1935)
Vanishing Act (1955)
Filmography
Little Caesar (1930) - script, based on 1929 novel under pen name of Lincoln MacVeagh