Hugh Pendexter

American novelist and screenwriter
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican novelist and screenwriter
PlacesUnited States of America
wasWriter Novelist
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth15 January 1875
Death11 June 1940 (aged 65 years)
The details

Biography

Hugh Pendexter (born 1875) was an American journalist, novelist, screenwriter. Pendexter began his career as a humorous writer; some of this early work was anthologised in Mark Twain's book, Library of Humor and Wit. Pendexter's main body of fiction consisted of historical novels and Westerns for such publications as Adventure and Argosy. Pendexter was known for his detailed research when writing fiction; his stories were "often accompanied with extensive reading lists of the books that were used in writing the story". Pendexter's novel, Kings of the Missouri, about fur trading and the founding of St. Louis, is regarded by some critics as his best work.
For much of his life, Pendexter lived in Norway, Maine. He spent several years as a teacher of Latin and Greek in Maine High schools and left that work to enter newspaper work in Rochester, N. Y. where he worked on the Rochester Post Express. After twelve years as news writer he returned to Norway, where he married Helen M. Faunce, and devoted his entire time to fiction writing.
Pendexter was a friend of the writer Talbot Mundy.

Movies

  • A Daughter of the Wolf (1919)
    • Story; Black and white silent film
  • Wolf Law (1922)
    • Story; Black and white silent film

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