Джеймс Холдинг
Об авторе
[b]Джеймс Холдинг[/b] (англ. [b]James Holding[/b], James Clark Carlisle Holding) Американский писатель, поэт, редактор. 27 апреля 1907 г., Бен Эйвон (Пенсильвания, США) - 28 марта 1997 г., Питтсбург (Пенсильвания) Публиковался как [b]Эллери Куин-младший[/b] (англ. [b]Ellery Queen Jr.[/b]), [b]Freeric Dannay[/b], [b]Manfred B. Lee[/b], [b]Clark Carlisle[/b]. Abstract: Allegheny County native James C.C. Holding was born in 1907. Educated at Yale, he became an advertising executive in the Pittsburgh branch of the firm BBDO. After 25 years at the company, he retired and began a second career as a writer. Though he wrote 18 children’s books, he is best-known as one of the many writers under the pen name, “Ellery Queen.” He would write over 250 mysteries for that genre and others. Holding passed away in a Pittsburgh hospital in 1997. Biography: James Clark Carlisle Holding was born April 27, 1907, in Ben Avon, Pennsylvania. His parents were James Clark Carlisle, an engineer, and Laura May (Krepps) Holding. In 1931, he married Janet Spice, with whom he had two children. Holding attended Yale University and was a member of Alpha Chi Rho. He graduated with an A.B. in 1928. Holding then took the next year off to travel throughout Europe. When he returned, he took a job in Pittsburgh with Harbison Walker Co. as a firebrick salesman. After a short stay at Harbison Walker Co., he began to work as a junior copywriter at Batte, Barton, Durstine & Osborne in Pittsburgh. He was a copywriter from 1930 to 1944. In 1944, he moved to copy chief. During this time he created the advertising slogan for Fort Pitt beer: “Fort Pitt, That’s It.” He became vice-president after eight years, and he remained in this position until 1958. While holding this high position in the company, Holding suffered the traumatic loss of his son, which eventually drove him to retire from the firm. At this point, though, Holding became a consultant, where he remained for the next ten years. Then, in 1959, he began freelance writing, which he continued until his death. Holding’s first juvenile book, The Lazy Little Zulu, was published in 1962, a few years after he began his freelance writing career. Holding’s writing established him in the field of mystery, as well as in children’s literature. He wrote 17 juvenile books. He was also the author of more than 160 mystery stories under the pseudonym of Ellery Queen and edited many other stories. Holding wrote short mystery stories for Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, and Mike Shayne’s Mystery Magazine, along with other similar periodicals. One of the more famous villains he created in his mysteries was Manuel Andradas, a Brazilian hit-man who disguised himself as a photographer. He was also a contributor to travel magazines such as Clipper and Signature. Holding won the John Masefield Poetry Prize and the John Hubbard Curtis Poetry Prize twice. James and Janet Holding moved to Sarasota, Florida, in 1971, but returned in 1991 when their health began to fail. Holding spent his last years living with his wife Janet at the Sherwood Oaks Retirement Home in Cranberry, Pennsylvania. Holding died March 29, 1997, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Works: Juvenile Books (as James Holding) The Lazy Little Zulu. New York: Morrow, 1962. Mr. Moonlight and Omar. New York: Morrow, 1962. The Sky Eater and Other South Sea Tales. New York: Abelard-Schuman, 1965. Poko and the Golden Demon. New York: Abelard-Schuman, 1967. The Ugliest Dog in the World. Middletown, CT: Xerox Education Publications, 1979. Juvenile Books (as Clark Carlisle) Bugs Bunny’s Carrot Machine. Racine, WI: Golden Press, 1971. Mystery Stories (as Ellery Queen, Jr.) Death Spins the Platter. New York: Pocket Books, 1962. The Player on the Other Side. New York: Putnam Books, 1965. The Roman Hat Mystery: A Problem in Deduction. Feltham: Hamlyn Publications, 1981. The Ellery Queen Omnibus. New York: Dorset Press, 1988. There Was an Old Woman. New York: HarperPerennial, 1992. Calamity Town. New York: HarperPerennial, 1992. Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine Go to Sleep, Darling (August 1960) The Vapor Clue (December 1961) Those Cunning Florentines (June 1962) Variations on a Theme (May 1963) An Exercise in Insurance (March 1964) Second Talent (July 1968) A Case of Brotherly Love (January 1970) Just What the Doctor Ordered (May 1970) - novelette T'ang of the Suffering Dragon (September 1971) Conversation Piece (December 1972) Triple Play (February 1974) The Fund-Raisers (December 1975) The Contract (August 1977) Death of a Dream (July 1980) The Reward (October 1980) The Photographer and the Arsonist (November 1980) Shima Maru (January 1981) Work of Art (February 1981) Hitchcock Fiction Anthologies Where is Thy Sting? in Alfred Hitchcock Presents: 16 Skeletons from My Closet (1963) A Question of Ethics in Alfred Hitchcock's Anti-Social Register (1965) You Can't Be Too Careful in Alfred Hitchcock's Games Killers Play (1968) Once upon a Bank Floor... in Alfred Hitchcock's Happiness is a Warm Corpse (1969) The Queen's Jewel in Alfred Hitchcock Presents: A Month of Mystery (1969) The Misopedist in Alfred Hitchcock: This One Will Kill You (1971) Second Talent in Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories to Stay Awake By (1971) Monkey King in Alfred Hitchcock's Down by the Old Bloodstream (1971) Cop Killer in Alfred Hitchcock's Death Can Be Beautiful (1972) The Sapphire that Disappeared in Alfred Hitchcock's a Hearse of a Different Color (1972) A Steal at the Price in Alfred Hitchcock's Death-Mate (1973) Padlock for Charlie Draper in Alfred Hitchcock's Let It All Bleed Out (1973) Conflict of Interest in Alfred Hitchcock's Coffin Break (1974) Contraband in Alfred Hitchcock's Murder Racquet (1975) A Turn to the Right in Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Grave Business (1975) The Moonlighter in Alfred Hitchcock's Having a Wonderful Crime (1977) Border Crossing in Alfred Hitchcock: Killers at Large (1978) Career Man in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Make Your Blood Run Cold (1978) Once Upon a Bank Floor in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Scare You Stiff (1978) The Montevideo Squeeze in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Be Read with Caution (1979) Go to Sleep, Darling in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Send Chills Down Your Spine (May 1979) The Montevideo Squeeze in The Best of Mystery (1980) Once Upon a Bank Floor in The Best of Mystery (1980) The Lipstick Explosion in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Make Your Teeth Chatter (1980) Miranda's Lucky Punch in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Make You Weak in the Knees (1981) A Question of Ethics in Alfred Hitchcock's Your Share of Fear (1982) A Funny Place to Park in Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Make You Quake & Quiver (1982) T'ang of the Suffering Dragon in Alfred Hitchcock's Death-Reach (1982) Busman's Holiday in Alfred Hitchcock's Borrowers of the Night (1983) A Padlock for Charlie Draper in Alfred Hitchcock's Mortal Errors (1984) Monkey King in Alfred Hitchcock's Grave Suspicions (1984) Career Man in Alfred Hitchcock's Book of Horror Stories: Book 5 (1986) The Time Before the Crime in Tales of Terror (1986) Career Man in Tales of Terror (1986) The Sunburned Fisherman in Alfred Hitchcock's A Brief Darkness (1987) China Trader in Alfred Hitchcock's Most Wanted: The First Lineup (1988) Recipe for a Murder in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine Presents Fifty Years of Crime and Suspense (2006)