Jump to content

Edward Newhouse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edward Newhouse (November 10, 1911 – November 11, 2002) was a short story author and staff writer for The New Yorker.[1] He was born Ede Ujhazi in Hungary and was married to Dorothy DeLay.[2] Edward wrote proletarian novels in the 1930s, and many short stories about life, and he worked for almost thirty years with the New Yorker. He was a friend of many of the literary giants of the 20th century. His writings from 1929 to 1965 were instructive for both an understanding of the radical mindset and as an example of the late manifestation of American literary realism. He retired from a literary career in the year 1965. He also helped story movies like I Want You and Shadow in the Sky.

Selected bibliography

[edit]

Novels

[edit]
  • You Can't Sleep Here (1934)
  • This Is Your Day (1937)
  • The Hollow of the Wave (1950)
  • The Temptation of Roger Heriott (1954)

Short story collections

[edit]
  • Anything Can Happen (1941)
  • The Iron Chain (1946)
  • Many Are Called (1951)

Short stories

[edit]

All stories published in The New Yorker except as noted.

Title Publication Collected in
"The Girl Who Had to Get Married" (aka "13. Tom Martens") January 21, 1939 Anything Can Happen
"The Mentocrats" (aka "1. Benny Frankel") May 6, 1939
"You Never Used to Be Like This" (aka "3. Walter Schlesinger") June 3, 1939
"Never Trust a Woman" (aka "14. Jake Shapiro") July 8, 1939
"Ever Been to Brooklyn?" (aka "22. Glenn Carson") March 16, 1940
"A Hot Time in the Old Town" (aka "5. Manny Hirsch") May 25, 1940
"Not Lonely But Alone" (aka "4. Roger Dunn") June 1, 1940
"All They Do Is Talk" (aka "26. Theodore Smith") July 13, 1940
"Everything Will Be All Right" (aka "26. Theodore Smith") The New Republic (September 30, 1940)
"Ten Years on a Desert Island" (aka "30. Jake Shapiro") November 23, 1940
"Billy the Bastard" (aka "Tough Kid" and "8. Tom Martens") January 4, 1941
"The Wolf" (aka "29. Dan Mulloy") January 25, 1941
"The Revolution" (aka "7. Manny Hirsch") ? (ca. April 1941[3])
"Out Where the West Begins" (aka "10. Tom Martens") April 19, 1941
"With Men It's Different" (aka "28. Max Johannes") October 4, 1941
"2. Roger Dunn" Anything Can Happen (November 1941)
"6. Roger Dunn"
"9. Douglas Shane"
"12. Henry Boyce"
"15. Sam Baker"
"16. Barney Lindemuth"
"17. Howard Horn"
"18. Bill Bongiorno"
"19. Louis Wyman"
"20. Jake Shapiro"
"21. Joe Sylvester"
"23. Joe Sylvester"
"24. Robert Drucker"
"25. Sidney Rankin"
"27. Arthur Brunel"
"Dr. Frederick Curtis"
"The Eagle" November 22, 1941 The Iron Chain
"Defense of the Islands" December 20, 1941 -
"The Legs Go First" February 28, 1942 The Iron Chain
"The Indecent Haste of Horace Gardner" March 14, 1942 -
"The Magic Hour" May 9, 1942 The Iron Chain
"Vacancy in Westchester" August 8, 1942
"The Day Before" September 5, 1942
"Mother's Day" September 19, 1942 -
"A Gorgeous Number" October 3, 1942 The Iron Chain
"Position of the Soldier" July 10, 1943
"Close Your Eyes"
aka "Close Your Eyes and Say This Is the Washington Yemonumet"
October 9, 1943
"In Time of Calamity" January 29, 1944
"A Short Visit to Naples" May 27, 1944
"I Hope You'll Understand" January 20, 1945
"The Four Freedoms" February 10, 1945
"Pro and Con" September 1, 1945
"Time Out" October 20, 1945
"Poker Game" December 29, 1945
"The Impossible" February 9, 1946
"What Do You Do?" March 2, 1946
"Irving" The Iron Chain (October 1946)
"Major and Mrs. Fletcher"
"The Swarm"
"Delay En Route"
"The Iron Chain"
"Put Yourself in My Place" February 15, 1947 Many Are Called
"The Light Across the Hill" April 5, 1947
"Choice of Weapons" May 10, 1947
"A Couple of Old-Timers" May 31, 1947
"The Wacky Afternoon" September 20, 1947
"The Volcano" October 11, 1947
"Seventy Thousand Dollars" August 6, 1949
"My Brother's Second Funeral" October 8, 1949
"The Bronze Thing" November 19, 1949
"New Year's Day" December 31, 1949
"Come Again Another Day" April 15, 1950
"The War for Tony" September 2, 1950
"The Ambassador" April 20, 1957 -
"The Bromley Touch" May 18, 1957 -
"Howard and Dinah" November 23, 1957 -
"Lead, Damsel, and I Follow" March 8, 1958 -
"Debut Recital" April 26, 1958 -
"Hungarians" November 27, 1965 -

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Edward Newhouse at IMDb
  2. ^ Caldwell, Mark (2001). New York Night: The Mystique and Its History. Scribner. ISBN 978-0-7432-4277-6.
  3. ^ Date given in Many Are Called: Forty-Two Short Stories, p. 103
[edit]