Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Lester Dent
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Biography== ===Early years=== Dent was born in 1904 in [[La Plata, Missouri]]. He was the only child of Bernard Dent, a [[rancher]], and Alice Norfolk, a teacher before her marriage. The Dents had been living in [[Wyoming]] for some time, but had returned to La Plata so that Mrs. Dent could be with her family during the birth. The Dents returned to Wyoming in 1906, where they worked a ranch near Pumpkin Buttes, Wyoming.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=35}} Dent's early years were spent in the lonely hills of Wyoming. He attended a local one-room school house, often paying for tuition with furs that he had caught.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=38}} He had few companions or friends; this early loneliness may have helped develop his talents as a story-teller.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|pp=36, 41}} Around 1919, the Dent family returned to La Plata for good, where Dent's father took up dairy farming. Dent completed his elementary and secondary education there.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=49}} In 1923, Dent enrolled at [[Chillicothe Business College]] in [[Chillicothe, Missouri]]. His original goal was to become a banker. However, while standing in the application line, he began talking to a fellow applicant about career options. He found out that the starting salary for a [[telegraph]] operator was $20 a week more than a bank clerk, so he changed his major to telegraphy. After completing the course, he taught at CBC for a short time.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=65}} In 1924, Dent became a telegraph operator for [[Western Union]] in [[Carrollton, Missouri]].{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=65}} In 1925, he moved to [[Ponca City]], Oklahoma, to work as a telegrapher for Empire Oil and Gas Company. It was in Ponca City that he met his future wife, Norma Gerling. They were married on August 9, 1925.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|pp=66β68}} ===Writing career=== [[File:All detective 193405.jpg|thumb|right|Dent's "Murder By Circles" was the cover story on the May 1934 issue of ''[[All Detective Magazine]]'']] In 1926, the Dents moved to [[Chickasha]], Oklahoma, where Dent worked as a telegrapher for the [[Associated Press]]. One of Dent's co-workers had published a story in a pulp magazine, earning the huge sum (for that time) of $450. Dent, a voracious reader, was very familiar with pulp magazines of the day, and was sure he could write at least as well, if not better. He took advantage of the slow time during the graveyard shift to write. His first professional sale was an action-adventure story entitled "Pirate Cay"; it appeared in the September 1929 issue of ''Top Notch'' magazine.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|pp=7, 60, 182}}<ref>{{cite web|title=Lester Dent biography |url=http://www.mindspring.com/~sheba/dent.html |access-date=October 10, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070410002746/http://www.mindspring.com/~sheba/dent.html |archive-date=April 10, 2007}}</ref> Shortly after the publication of his story, Dent was contacted by [[Dell Publishing]] in New York City. They were willing to offer him $500 a month if he would write exclusively for their magazines.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=9}} Dent, stunned by the good fortune, took some time considering the offer, but eventually accepted.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=70}} The Dents relocated to New York, arriving January 1, 1931. Dent quickly learned the trade of the pulp writer, teaching himself how to write quickly and with few rewrites. After Dell ended its pulp line in May 1931, Dent retreated to Missouri to regroup. Soon, he was back in New York, writing for the other pulp chains.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=11}} In 1932, [[Henry Ralston]] of [[Street & Smith|Street and Smith Publications]] contacted Dent with a proposition for a new magazine. Ralston had scored a great success with ''[[The Shadow]]'' magazine, and was interested in developing a second title around a central character. He had in mind an adventure hero, which appealed to Dent's love of that genre. While Dent was unhappy to later discover that his stories would be published under a house name ([[Kenneth Robeson]]), he was happy to receive $500 per novel (which would later increase to $750), and accepted Ralston's offer.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|pp=13β16}} Issue Number 1 of ''Doc Savage'' magazine hit the stands in February 1933; within 6 months it was one of the top selling pulp magazines on the market. Much of the success stemmed from Dent's fantastic imagination, fueled by his own personal curiosity. Dent was able to use the freedom that his new-found financial security allowed him, to learn and to explore. In addition to being a wide-ranging reader, Dent also took courses in technology and the trades. He earned both his [[amateur radio]] and [[pilot license]], passed both the electricians' and plumbers' trade exams,{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|pp=2, 10}} and was an avid mountain climber. His usual method was to learn a subject thoroughly, then move on to another. An example is boating: in May 1934, Dent bought a 40-foot two-masted [[Chesapeake Bay]] "[[bugeye]]" [[schooner]], ''Albatross''. He and his wife lived on it for several years, sailing it up and down the eastern seaboard and even doing some sunken-treasure hunting in the Caribbean,{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=23}} then sold it in 1940.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=32}} The Dents traveled extensively as well, enough to earn Lester a membership in the [[Explorers Club]].{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=173}} He was sponsored by fellow pulp writer [[J. Allan Dunn]] and Navy Reserve Captain Charles Richardson Pond (1889β1969), a member of the family that owned [[Pond's]] Cosmetics and a pioneer of transoceanic flight. He was elected to membership on November 9, 1936, but was apparently not all that involved in the Club beyond bouncing story ideas off more experienced members. He contributed to a year-long one-time fundraiser for the Club conducted throughout the year 1939, for which he was awarded a [[sterling silver]] miniature of the coveted Explorers Club Medal, No. 89 of an unknown number of such medallions, with a chain allowing it to be worn as a [[bracelet]]. He stopped paying his annual dues in December 1945 and was dropped from membership for this delinquency in January 1948. In 1940, the Dents returned to La Plata for good.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|pp=3, 32, 126}} Dent continued to write for ''Doc Savage'', but also found time to work in the other genres. His post-1941 Doc Savage work benefited from this; the later Savage novels are known for their tighter plotting, improved dialogue, and a shift towards mystery instead of super-science. Doc Savage himself began to shed his superhuman image, and to show a more fallible, human side. Dent may have recycled some generic detective stories as Doc tales; ''King Joe Cay'' features Doc working alone, in disguise, with no aides, gadgets, or headquarters, and an interest in the ladies. ''Doc Savage'' Magazine ceased publication in 1949.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=138}} Of the 181 Doc Savage novels published by Street and Smith, 179 were credited to Kenneth Robeson; and all but twenty were written by Dent. The first novel, ''The Man of Bronze'', used the name Kenneth Roberts, but this was changed after it was discovered that there was another writer named Kenneth Roberts. The March 1944 issue, "The Derelict of Skull Shoal", was accidentally credited to Lester Dent. This was the only time during the run of the magazine that Dent's real name was used.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=18}} Following his tenure on ''Doc Savage'', Dent found continuing success as a mystery and [[Western (genre)|western]] writer. His last published short story was a Western entitled "Savage Challenge", published in the February 22, 1958, issue of the ''[[Saturday Evening Post]]''.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=122}} A last novel, ''Lady in Peril'', was released as half of an Ace Double the month that Lester died.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=190}} Dent suffered a heart attack in February 1959. He was hospitalized, but subsequently died on March 11, 1959. Dent is buried in the La Plata cemetery.{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=141}}<ref>{{cite book | first=M. Martin | last=McCarey-Laird | title=Lester Dent: The Man, His Craft, and His Market | year=1994 | publisher=Hidalgo Pub. | isbn=0964100495}}</ref> The [[Lester and Norma Dent House]] was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1990.<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref> Since his death, Lester Dent has lived on in reprints and new stories discovered and marketed by his literary agent, [[Will Murray]].{{sfn|Cannaday|1990|p=145}} In 2009, Hardcase Crime published his noir novel, ''Honey in His Mouth'' (written 1956, previously unpublished) to rave reviews. [[Black Dog Books (US publisher)|Black Dog Books]] has released five volumes of The Lester Dent Library. [[Altus Press]] issued ''The Weird Adventures of the Blond Adder'' in 2010 and ''Hell in Boxes: The Exploits of Lynn Lash and Foster Fade'' in 2012.
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)