John McPartland

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Cover of John McPartland's Tokyo Doll (1958)

John Donald McPartland (1911–1958) was a writer specializing in pulp fiction crime whose career was ended by an early death at age 47. In addition to his pulp work, he is known for his more standard novel, No Down Payment, which was later made into the movie of the same title, directed by Martin Ritt and starring Joanne Woodward and Tony Randall, among others.

McPartland also is known for a strongly anti-communist Life magazine article, titled "Portrait of an American Communist," which he penned as a Life magazine staff writer in January 1948.

Biography[edit]

McPartland was born April 13, 1911, in Chicago. He was educated as an engineer. In 1943, during World War II, he was inducted into the U.S. Army.[1] After the war, his first book, Sex in Our Changing World, was published in 1947 to moderate success, and he joined Life as a staff writer. Later as an Army reservist, he was called back during the Korean War and served with the pacific division of the Stars and Stripes newspaper where he was a staff writer.[2] On his return from Asia, McPartland settled in California and began to write on a regular basis, though he retained some desire to be an engineer. In addition to his novels, he wrote a handful of screenplays for Hollywood. On September 14, 1958, in Monterey, California, McParland suffered a heart attack and died. He was 47.

During the settlement of his estate, McPartland's personal life became national news. It was revealed during estate proceedings that he had a legal wife and son in Mill Valley, California, while at the same time, a mistress in Monterey who had borne him five children, and who as Mrs. Eleanor McPartland, was named the city's "Mother of the Year" in 1956.[3] Additionally, a daughter from an earlier marriage in Chicago was later attached to the estate.

Writer[edit]

Most of McPartland's books were published as Fawcett Gold Medal paperback originals. His novels, aside from No Down Payment, fall under the hard-boiled pulp category. The settings of his books were usually the seamy underworld of urban and suburban America, and featured plots involving romantic intrigue, international espionage, extortion, drug trafficking and crime syndicates.[4] Japan was the backdrop for three of his books, of which two were set during the period of the post-WWII Allied occupation, a setting McPartland seemed to have experienced firsthand, particularly the sections of "sleazy, vice-ridden, post-Occupation Tokyo."[5]

Many of McPartland's pulp novels have been reprinted since their initial publication in the 1950s; some are currently in print, including Big Red's Daughter and Tokyo Doll, both reissued by Black Curtain Press in 2013.[6]

His more standard novel, No Down Payment, was later made into the movie of the same title, directed by Martin Ritt and starring Joanne Woodward and Tony Randall, among others.

McPartland also wrote four Hollywood screenplays that become movies, of which one was derived from his own work, The Wild Party, which was adapted to the screen for the 1956 movie, The Wild Party, starring Anthony Quinn. To date, three of McPartland's novels have been brought to the screen: No Down Payment; The Kingdom of Johnny Cool which became the 1963 movie Johnny Cool (starring Elizabeth Montgomery and Henry Silva); and the aforementioned The Wild Party.

Works[edit]

Cover of McPartland's "No Down Payment"(1957)

Pulp Fiction[edit]

  • Love Me Now (1952)
  • Big Red's Daughter (1953)
  • Tokyo Doll (1953)
  • Affair in Tokyo (1954)
  • Face of Evil (1954)
  • The Wild Party (1956)
  • Danger for Breakfast (1956)
  • I'll See You in Hell (1956)
  • Ripe Fruit (1958)
  • The Kingdom of Johnny Cool (1959)
  • The Last Night (1959)

Fiction[edit]

  • No Down Payment (Simon & Schuster, 1957)

Non-fiction[edit]

  • Sex in Our Changing World (Rinehart & Co., 1947)

Screenplays[edit]

  • The Wild Party (1956)
  • No Time to be Young (1957)
  • Street of Sinners (1957)
  • The Lost Missile (1958)

Article[edit]

  • "Portrait of an American Communist," Life (January 5, 1948)[7]

In 1948, McPartland wrote "Portrait of an American Communist," an exposé for Life magazine "in which he delved into communism's socially aberrant nature and the racy, lusty associations with free love." The subtitle reads, "After 12 years of hard work, boredom, and grim discipline, a member of the party now waits for a crisis – and power." It traces the career of "Kelly" from his exposure to Communism in high school, his luring by "pretty girls" to "Workers' School," his exposure to more "party girls" and membership in the Party, to teaching professionally on an "Adult Education Project" of the WPA. Thereafter follows a select history of the 1930s including the mention of unions (John L. Lewis, the Steel Workers Organizing Committee, the Committee for Industrial Organizations, Memorial Day massacre of 1937), the Spanish Civil War, and the Hitler-Stalin Pact. During World War II, he lies about his Party affiliation. After the war, "most of the man like 'Kelly' were told to lie low... So 'Kelly' waits..."[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Letters to the Editor." Life Magazine. January 26, 1948, page 15.
  2. ^ McPartland, John. "About the Author" in No Down Payment (New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 1957), page 313.
  3. ^ "Milestones." Time Magazine (September 29, 1958; Vol. 72, Issue 13, Page 98).
  4. ^ Crider, Bill (20 September 2005). "Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Gold Medal Corner -- John McPartland".
  5. ^ Server, Lee. Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers. (New York: Facts on File, 2002), p. 188.
  6. ^ McPartland, John (May 2013). Big Red's Daughter. ISBN 978-1627551038.
  7. ^ a b McPartland, John (5 January 1948). "Portrait of an American Communist". Life. pp. 74–82. Retrieved 4 November 2017.

External links[edit]