A.B. Guthrie Jr.

Info

Role

Writer

Date of birth

01/13/1901

Date of death

04/26/1991

Place of birth

Bedford, Indiana, USA

A.B. Guthrie Jr.

Biography

American story writer and author of novels which chronicle the settling of the American West from 1830. With the exception of These Thousand Hills (1959), Guthrie depicted a rugged, generally unromanticised West, his works often filled with accurate historical detail. He attended the University of Washington (1919-20) and graduated with a bachelor's degree from the University of Montana in 1923. A former journalist and executive editor of the Lexington Reader (1926-47), he won the Pulitzer Prize for his 1950 novel 'The Way West'. His best-known filmed works are The Big Sky (1952) (written in 1947, about a 19th century beaver trapper) and his Oscar-nominated screenplay for Shane (1953). Guthrie later became a staunch environmentalist, donating 80 acres to the Nature Conservancy's Pine Butte Swamp Preserve a year prior to his death.

Known For

Shane

Shane

7.6
7.6
The Big Sky

The Big Sky

6.9
6.9
The Way West

The Way West

6.2
6.2
The Kentuckian

The Kentuckian

6.2
6.2