Stewart was born in Sewickley, Pennsylvania, to engineer George Rippey Stewart Sr., who designed gasworks and electric railways and later became a citrus "rancher" in Southern California, and Ella Wilson Stewart. The younger Stewart earned a bachelor's degree from Princeton University in 1917, an MA from the University of California, Berkeley, and his Ph.D. in English literature from Columbia University in 1922.[3] He accepted a job with the English department at Berkeley in 1923.[4] After his father died, he stopped using the "Jr." with his name.
Stewart was a founding member of the American Name Society in 1956–57. He once served as an expert witness in a murder trial as a specialist in family names. His best-known academic work is Names On The Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (1945; reprinted, New York Review Books, 2008). He wrote three other books on names: A Concise Dictionary of American Place-Names (1970), Names On The Globe (1975), and American Given Names (1979). His scholarly works concerning the poetic meter of ballads (published using the name George R. Stewart, Jr.), beginning with his 1922 Ph.D. dissertation at Columbia, remain important.
Works
As an author, Stewart's output was diverse. Ordeal by Hunger, Pickett's Charge, and other works are examinations of American history. Earth Abides was a futuristic science fiction novel about the destruction of civilization, in which everything formerly taken for granted about civilization and the situation of human beings in their environment can no longer be assumed.
East Of Giants is historical fiction. Man, An Autobiography is one of the very few works of speculative anthropology, in which he attempts to deduce how major developments of prehistorical civilization must have happened. Good Lives provides a series of biographical sketches with the purpose of determining what it is that makes for a good life. Not So Rich As You Think (1968) was a prescient early essay in environmentalism. Storm (1941) uses an immense storm as its protagonist, an extraordinary departure in itself.
Years of the City is concerned with the factors that result in the development and decay of civilizations.
For Earth Abides (1949) he won the inaugural International Fantasy Award for fiction in 1951.[1] It was dramatized by the radio program Escape and served as an inspiration for Stephen King's The Stand, as King has stated.[5]The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction terms it "one of the finest of all Post-Holocaust/Ruined Earth novels".[1]
Storm was dramatized as A Storm Called Maria on the November 2, 1959, episode of ABC's anthology television series Walt Disney Presents. Co-produced by Ken Nelson Productions, it blended newsreel footage of several different storms to represent the mega-storm of the novel and traced the storm from its origins in Japan to the coast of California. The cast included non-actors, among them the dam superintendent George Kritsky, the telephone lineman Walt Bowen, and the highway superintendent Leo Quinn.
Another novel, Fire (1948), and a historical work, Ordeal By Hunger (1936), also evoked environmental catastrophes.
Ordeal by Hunger: The Story of the Donner Party (1936; reprinted 1992). ISBN978-0-395-61159-3
John Phoenix (1937)
East of the Giants (1938)
Doctor's Oral (1939)
Take your Bible in one hand;: The life of William Henry Thomes, author of A whaleman's adventures on land and sea, Lewey and I, The bushrangers, A gold hunter's adventures, etc., 1939
Names on the Land: an historical account of place-naming in the United States (1945; reprinted 1958, 1967 [Sentry paperback], 2008). ISBN978-1-59017-273-5
^Billings, Elden E.; Stewart, George R.; Stern, Philip Van Doren (1963–1964). "Rev. of George R. Steward, Pickett's Charge: A Microhistory of the Final Attack at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863". Military Affairs. 27 (4): 181–82. doi:10.2307/1985012. JSTOR1985012.
Zelinsky, Wilbur (Spring 1973). "George R. Stewart: American Place-Names; A Concise Dictionary for the Continental United States of America". General Linguistics. 13 (1). University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press: 43–44.
Sources
"Scott, Donald, The Life and Truth of George R. Stewart; A Literary Biography of the Author of EARTH ABIDES". [1].
"George R. Stewart, toponymist", Names, Volume 24, 1976, pp. 77–85.