Michael S. Reynolds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the 1970s

Michael Shane Reynolds (1937–2000) was Professor of English at North Carolina State University from 1965 to 1997.[1] His main focus was the author Ernest Hemingway and his magnum opus was an extensive, five-volume biography:[2][3]

  1. The Young Hemingway (Blackwell, 1986),
  2. Hemingway: The Paris Years (Blackwell, 1989)
  3. Hemingway: The American Homecoming (Blackwell, 1992)
  4. Hemingway: The 1930s (Norton, 1997)
  5. Hemingway: The Final Years (Norton, 1999)

Reynolds studied Hemingway in a meticulous way, cataloguing the details of his life. His doctoral thesis at Duke University became his first book, Hemingway’s First War. This showed that Hemingway likewise did not just write from personal experience, as commonly supposed, but also did detailed research for his writing.[4]

Reynolds was the son of a geologist in Kansas City, Missouri. He married Ann Eubanks in 1960 and they had two daughters. His death at age 63 in Santa Fe, New Mexico was caused by pancreatic cancer.[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Reynolds, Michael S., 1937-2000, North Carolina State University
  2. ^ Kelly Francis (2011), Guide to the Michael S. Reynolds Personal Papers, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
  3. ^ James Plath (2000), "Reconstructing Hemingway: An Interview with Biographer Michael S. Reynolds", North Carolina Literary Review (9), University of North Carolina Press: 69
  4. ^ Myrna Oliver (18 August 2000), "Michael S. Reynolds; Wrote Five-Volume Biography of Novelist Ernest Hemingway", Los Angeles Times
  5. ^ Dinitia Smith (15 August 2000), "Michael S. Reynolds, Biographer Whose Career Was Hemingway, Dies at 63", The New York Times