Bernard Marshall

Bernard Gay Marshall
Born (1875-08-23)August 23, 1875
North Easton, Massachusetts, US
Died December 14, 1945(1945-12-14) (aged 70)
Occupation Writer, editor
Nationality American
Genre Adventure fiction, historical fiction, children's literature (mainly for boys)
Notable works Cedric the Forester

Bernard G. Marshall (August 23, 1875  December 14, 1945) was an American writer. His historical novel Cedric the Forester was one runner-up for the inaugural Newbery Medal in 1922.[1]

Life

Bernard Gay Marshall was born to Francis F. and Helen F. Doten Marshall in North Easton, Massachusetts, where he later attended high school. Wanting to be a writer, he "thought he could play in orchestras and make a living until he had a foothold as an author".[2]:244 He subsequently worked as a musician, legal stenographer, an advertising and technical writer, and as a ship builder during World War I.[2]:245 In July 1903 Marshall married Ida M. Conklin. The couple had one daughter, Harriet C.[3]

Marshall wrote five historical fiction novels, romantic adventure stories set in great periods of the Anglo-Saxon struggle for freedom."[4] The books are set in time periods ranging from the England of King Arthur to Andrew Jackson's United States. He also wrote short stories and articles for magazines, including Sunset, Boys' Life, St. Nicholas, Munsey's Magazine, The American Magazine and The American Boy.[5][lower-alpha 1] In addition, he wrote for technical magazines and edited several trade journals. By 1921 Marshall had moved to Berkeley, California,[2] where he was a member of the San Francisco chapter of the Writer's Dinner Club.[5]

Bernard Gay Marshall died Dec. 14, 1945.

Critical reception

As a writer of historical fiction, Marshall's books were compared to Walter Scott's in length and desrciptive details,[6] though another added that to call Cedric the Forester a second Ivanhoe was "a mistake", adding "Bernard Marshall has done a good piece of work, but he is not Sir Walter".[7]:519

Marshall's novels were widely read,[2]:242–243 and reviewed for both children and adults. His first book, Cedric the Forester, received one of the inaugural Newbery Honor awards in 1922, for "the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children".[1][lower-alpha 2] The American Boy issued part of his first book under the title "Churl and Overlord".[7] The Unitarian Register Cedric the Forester referred to it as well written and informative,[6] and the scouting magazine Boys' Life frequently reviewed his novels for its young readers.[8]

Marshall's novels were also well received by adults. Walter of Tiverton received a star from The Bookman, which reviewed it as a book for adults,[9] as did The Outlook, calling it a "spirited romance".[10] The Saturday Review praised Redcoat and the Minuteman for the "clean, clear simplicity of his narrative",[11]:618 saying the plot was "skilfully handled".[11]:620

Books

Marshall's five books were all historical novels published by D. Appleton & Company. The first four were illustrated by J. Scott Williams.

When Saxon yeoman Cedric of Pellham Woods saves the life of Norman nobleman Dickon Mountjoy, he is made a squire, and a friendship begins between the two. Eventually Cedric becomes the best crossbowman in England, and is knighted. He then becomes instrumental in the establishment of the Magna Carta. The frequency of deaths in Cedric the Forester sometimes drew criticism.[7]:519

In 1922 Marshall was one runner-up for the inaugural Newbery Medal from the professional librarians, recognizing the previous year's "most distinguished contribution to American literature for children".[1] Members of the American Library Association were asked to nominate a book and Cedric the Forester was one of six that received at least two votes;[12] five were subsequently designated runners-up. Runner-up works are now called Newbery Honor Books, so latterday editions are authorized to display a silver seal on the cover.[1]

Two young knights, Walter of Tiverton and Sir Boris Delamar, find adventure in England during the time of Richard the Lionheart. They are often helped by the mysterious Knight of Ascalon, who always disappears before they can thank him.

Myles Delaroche, a descendant of Cedric the Forester, is an English Puritan, though his friend Arthur Hinsdale is a Royalist. The two men find their friendship tested by the English Civil War. The story portrays both sides of the struggle with understanding and sympathy. At one point Delaroche "saw that no peace would be durable, on whatever victories founded, if those who triumphed sought to impose their sway upon the nation and to forbid all forms of worship save their own."[13] Eventually Delaroche leaves England for the United States, allowing the series to continue there.

Set during the American Revolution, this book tells the story of another Delaroche, Richard, who leaves Harvard to join the intelligence branch of the Minutemen. Delaroche encounters George Washington and Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, is mistaken for a loyalist, and takes part in the Battle of Bunker Hill.

The United States is now involved in the War of 1812 and Hubert Delaroche is too young to join the army, so he volunteers as a messenger. He is present as Commodore Decatur attempts to run a British blockade. They don't succeed, and Delaroche is forced to escape through the Cumberland Mountains to Tennessee, where he joins Andrew Jackson's army, and makes a new friend, a Shawnee named Blue Feather.

Notes

  1. Marshall may have sometimes used the pen name Robert Wingate.
  2. This was not the last time the Newbery honored a book originally published for adults. Parravano, "Alive and Vigorous", The Horn Book, July/August 1999.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Newbery Awards". Retrieved 2012-05-15.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Overton, Grant (2004). Cargoes for Crusoes. Kessinger Publishing.
  3. Who was Who Among North American Authors, 1921–1939 vol. 2. Gale Research. 1976. p. 969.
  4. New York State Library (1919). "Bibliography Bulletin". 64-80: 24.
  5. 1 2 Who's Who Among North American Authors. Gale Research. 1935. p. 1065.
  6. 1 2 "Books for Boys and Girls". The Unitarian Register. 100: 1238. December 29, 1921. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  7. 1 2 3 Jordan, Alice M (1921). "Reviews for Children's Book Week". Libraries: a monthly review of library matters and methods. 26: 519. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  8. "Fifteen $ for You". Boys' Life: 51. November 1925.
  9. "The Bookman's Guide to Fiction". The Bookman: 638. August 1893. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  10. "The Book Table: The New Books". The Outlook: 193. June 13, 1923. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  11. 1 2 "The New Books". The Saturday Review. March 21, 1925.
  12. Page 3 in this reprint
  13. Marshall, Bernard G (1923). The Torch Bearers: A Tale of Cavalier Days. D. Appleton.

External links

Records for Marshall have not been integrated by libraries.
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