Charles Nordhoff

Charles Nordhoff
Charles Bernard Nordhoff
Born February 1, 1887(1887-02-01)
London, England
Died April 10, 1947(1947-04-10) (aged 60)
Santa Barbara, California
Occupation Novelist, memoirist
Nationality American
Period 1919 - 1947
Genres Adventure fiction
Subjects War memoir

Charles Bernard Nordhoff (February 1, 1887 - April 10, 1947) was an English-born American novelist and traveler.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Charles Nordhoff was born in London, England, on February 1, 1887, to American parents. His father was Walter Nordhoff, a wealthy businessman and author of The Journey of the Flame penned under the name "Antonio de Fierro Blanco". His mother, Sarah Cope Whitall, was of Pennsylvania Quaker stock. Nordhoff's parents returned to the United States with him in 1889, living first in Pennsylvania, then Rhode Island, and finally settling in California by 1898.[1]

Charles Bernard Nordhoff's grandfather was Charles Nordhoff, a journalist and author of non-fiction books. Nordhoff himself showed an early interest in writing. His first published work was an article in an ornithological journal, written in 1902 when he was just fifteen. At seventeen, he entered Stanford University, but transferred after one year to Harvard.

After graduation in 1909, Nordhoff worked for his father's businesses, first spending two years in Mexico managing a sugar plantation, then four years as an executive of a tile and brick company in Redlands, California. He quit in 1916, signed up with the Ambulance Corps, and traveled to France. There he joined other American expatriates as a pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille. He finished World War I as a lieutenant in the US Army Air Service.

Writing career

After leaving the service, Nordhoff stayed on in Paris, France, where he worked as a journalist and wrote his first book, The Fledgling. In 1919, he and another former Lafayette Squadron pilot, James Norman Hall, who was also an author and journalist, were asked to write a history of that unit. Neither man had known the other during the war.[2] Their first literary collaboration, The Lafayette Flying Corps, was published in 1920.

The two authors then returned to the United States, sharing a rented house on Martha's Vineyard, until given a commission by Harper's Magazine to write travel articles set in the South Pacific. They went to Tahiti in the Society Islands for research and inspiration, and ended up staying, Nordhoff for twenty years, Hall for life. Their second book, Faery Lands of the South Seas, was serialized in Harper's in 1920-21, then published in book form.

Nordhoff married a Tahitian woman, Pepe Teara, with whom he would have four daughters and two sons. He wrote novels on his own for ten years, of which The Derelict (1928) was considered his finest solo effort. Nordhoff and Hall continued to jointly write travel and adventure articles for The Atlantic during the 1920s and early 1930s.[3] They also co-authored another memoir of World War I, Falcons of France (1929). It was Hall who suggested they work on the Bounty trilogy, Mutiny on the Bounty, Men Against the Sea and Pitcairn's Island.

Nordhoff, who would write in the mornings and spend the afternoons fishing, once explained how he and James Hall worked together. They initially drew up charts of all the characters, then would dole out the chapters to each other. For their joint works they each made an effort to write in the other's style so as to achieve a reasonably smooth narrative.[2]

After The Bounty Trilogy, Nordhoff and Hall's most successful book was The Hurricane (1936). They continued their partnership writing novels until 1945. Nordhoff on his own would only produce one more solo book, In Yankee Windjammers (1940), a retelling of the ships, sailors, and way of life about which his grandfather had written. His last work, written in collaboration with a little known author named Tod Ford, was The Far Lands (1950) which would not appear until three years after his death.

Later life

Nordhoff divorced his first wife in 1936, left Tahiti a few years later, and returned to California, where in 1941 he married Laura Grainger Whiley.[2] During WWII, he had the honor of having a Liberty ship, SS Charles Nordhoff, built in Portland, Oregon in 1943, named after him.

Charles Bernard Nordhoff died alone at his home in Montecito, California, on April 10, 1947. His body was found the next morning by Tod Ford, who had called on him to work on their book. Newspapers at the time reported the death as an "apparent heart attack". Later sources indicate he had been drinking heavily, was depressed, and may have committed suicide.[2][4][5]

Selected works

  • The Fledgling, 1919
  • The Lafayette Flying Corps, with James Norman Hall, 1920
  • Faery Lands of the South Pacific, with James Norman Hall, 1921
  • Picarò, 1924
  • The Pearl Lagoon, 1924
  • The Derelict, 1928
  • Falcons of France, with James Norman Hall, 1929
  • The Bounty Trilogy, with James Norman Hall
  • The Hurricane, with James Norman Hall, 1936
  • The Dark River, with James Norman Hall, 1938
  • No More Gas, with James Norman Hall, 1940
  • In Yankee Windjammers, 1940
  • Botany Bay, with James Norman Hall, 1941
  • Men Without Country, with James Norman Hall, 1942
  • High Barbaree, with James Norman Hall, 1945
  • The Far Lands, with Tod Ford, 1950 (posthumous)

Film treatments

The Nordhoff-Hall books were the source for both the 1935 and the 1962 MGM films, Mutiny on the Bounty. The 1984 film, The Bounty, was based on other sources, more well-researched views of the actual events of 1789 in which the mutiny results not from maltreatment by Captain Bligh but from the lure of South Pacific life for the ship's crew.

In addition to the Bounty story, five other of Nordhoff's books, all of them collaborations with James Norman Hall, would be turned into films. (The screenplays were all done by other writers).

  • The Tuttles of Tahiti, made in 1942 with Charles Laughton, was based on the novel No More Gas.
  • Botany Bay, made in 1953 with Alan Ladd and James Mason, was adapted from the novel of the same name.

References

  1. ^ US Census, 1900, for Los Angeles County, California
  2. ^ a b c d The New York Times, "Charles Nordhoff, Author, Dies at 60", April 12, 1947, pg. 17
  3. ^ The New York Times, "A Vivid Tale of Maritime Adventure", Oct 16, 1932, pg BR7
  4. ^ California Death Index, 1940-1997
  5. ^ [1], retrieved June 3, 2008

Further reading

  • Twentieth Century Authors, H. E. Wilson & Company, 1942 (autobiographical essay)
  • American National Biography, Supplement 1, New York, Oxford University Press, 2002 (joint entry with James Norman Hall)

External links


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