Frank Norris

Benjamin Franklin Norris (March 5, 1870 - October 25, 1902) was an American novelist during the Progressive Era, the United States' first important naturalist writer. His notable works include McTeague (1899) and The Octopus (1901) and The Pit (1903). Although he did not support socialism as a political system, he nevertheless included somewhat of a socialist mentality in his works and influenced socialist/progressive writers such as Upton Sinclair.

Frank Norris was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1870, and moved to San Francisco at the age of fourteen. He later became a member of San Francisco's artistic Bohemian Club, which included such literary notables as Jack London and Ambrose Bierce. He studied painting in Paris for two years, where he was exposed to the naturalist novels of Emile Zola. He attended the University of California, Berkeley between 1890 and 1894 and then spent a year at Harvard University. He worked as a news correspondent in South Africa in 1895-86, and then an editorial assistant on the San Francisco Wave (1896 - 97). He worked for McClure's Magazine as a war correspondent in Cuba during the Spanish-American war in 1898. He joined the New York City publishing firm of Doubleday & Page in 1899.

He died of peritonitis in 1902 after an operation for appendicitis, leaving his The Epic of Wheat trilogy unfinished. He was only 32.

Bibliography

  • Moran of the Lady Letty (1898)
  • A Man's Woman (1900)
  • The Responsibilities of the Novelist (1903) - a collection of essay on the role of the writer

The San Francisco trilogy

  • McTeague (1899) - a naturalist work set in San Francisco, California. A dentist murders his wife and then dies while escaping through Death Valley. McTeague was filmed as Greed by Erich von Stroheim in 1924.
  • Blix (1900)
  • Vandover and the Brute (posthumously published 1914) - a study of degeneration.

The Epic of Wheat trilogy

  • The Octopus (1901) - descibes the raising of wheat in California and the conflict between the wheat growers and a railway company.
  • The Pit (1903) - the second novel in the trilogy, about wheat speculation on the Chicago Board of Trade.
  • The third novel, Wolf, was never written but was to have shown the American-grown wheat relieving a famine-stricken village in Europe.


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