Hugh Hood
Published: 1987
Total Pages: 252
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It all started towards the end of the 1930s when the young Hugh Hood serviced a flourishing "Saturday Evening Post" route with more than fifty weekly customers. That was where the author-to-be first encountered the short story, in the formula fiction of the famous magazine writers, Damon Runyon, Guy Gilpatric, Arthur Train, and of course the Master, P.G. Wodehouse. By the '40s, Hood had discovered Pocketbooks, and, in particular, "My Life and Hard Times" (included in "The Thurber Carnival") which led first to a story called Recollections of the Works Department' and later to some of the methods employed in his "opus," "The New Age / Le nouveau si?cle." For a writer who once professed If in the course of my life I can get a half a dozen stories printed, I'll be satisfied', "Flying a Red Kite" marked a different kind of beginning. The first selection of ten stories was completed in March of 1962 by John Colombo and Robert Weaver for publication by the Ryerson Press. Both editors felt at the time that an additional story was required to round out the sequence to a cohesive volume. Hood wrote The End of It', and that is how we have it here -- the eleven stories of Hood's first book-length publication, to which the author has added a lengthy introduction and a checklist of bibliographical data.