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Don Pendleton
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{{Short description|American author}} {{for|the American artist and designer|Don Pendleton (artist)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=November 2022}} {{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] --> |image = |imagesize = | name =Donald Eugene Pendleton | caption = | pseudonym = Dan Britain, Stephan Gregory | birth_date = {{birth date|1927|12|12}} | birth_place = [[Little Rock, Arkansas]], United States | death_date = {{death date and age|1995|10|23|1927|12|12}} | death_place = [[Sedona, Arizona]], United States | occupation = [[Novelist]] | period = 1969β1995 | genre = [[Adventure fiction]] | movement = | notableworks = | influences = | influenced = | website = {{URL|donpendleton.com}} | signature = }}'''Donald Eugene Pendleton''' (December 12, 1927 β October 23, 1995) was an American author of fiction and non-fiction books, best known for his creation of the fictional character [[Mack Bolan]], which have sold hundreds of millions of copies worldwide since the character's 1969 debut. Since 1980 the Bolan adventure-espionage books were written by other authors under the Pendleton name, and initially under Pendleton's editorial guidance. Other works include the ''Joe Copp, Private Eye'' series of six novels, the ''Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective'' series of six novels, and nonfiction books. He collaborated on several books with his wife, [[Linda Pendleton]], including their popular nonfiction book, ''To Dance With Angels.'' His earlier writings in the 1960s include mysteries, sci-fi, and futuristic books. Pendleton wrote several early books under the pseudonyms '''Dan Britain''' and '''Stephan Gregory'''. ==Biography== Don Pendleton served in the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] during [[World War II]], in all theaters of the war. He enlisted fraudulently at the age of 14 in 1941 and his enlistment ended in November 1947. He returned to active duty in 1952, during the [[Korean War]], and served until 1954. He worked as a telegrapher for the [[Southern Pacific Railroad]] until 1957, and then as an [[air traffic control]] specialist for the [[Federal Aviation Administration]]. In the 1960s, he worked for [[Martin Marietta]] on the [[Titan (rocket family)|Titan missile]] program. He later served as an engineering administrator at [[NASA]] during the [[Project Apollo|Apollo]] missions. Pendleton also worked on the [[C-5 Galaxy]] [[Military transport aircraft|transport aircraft]] program.<ref name="Server2014"/> At the age of 40 he started a creative writing correspondence course, but never completed it, instead turning in his first manuscript and selling it to a publisher. He is credited with creating the genre of action-adventure novels.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE4D71E3CF93BA15753C1A963958260 |title=Don Pendleton, 67, Writer Who Spawned a Genre |work=[[The New York Times]] |author=Robert Thomas Jr.|accessdate=May 5, 2014 | date=October 28, 1995}}</ref> He died in 1995, at age 67. ==Writings== ===Executioner series (1969β1980)=== {{Main|The Executioner (book series)}} The best-selling ''Executioner'' series made the men's action-adventure genre popular in the late 1960s and 1970s, and Pendleton was known as "the father of action adventure", a term he coined. Pendleton's novels revolved around Sergeant Mack Bolan's one-man war against the [[American Mafia|Mafia]], beginning with ''War Against the Mafia'' (1969) and ending with ''Satan's Sabbath'' (1980), after which Pendleton licensed the rights to his ''Executioner'' characters to the [[Harlequin Enterprises|Harlequin]] publishing group.<ref name="Markert2016" /> In the [[Pulp magazines|pulp]] tradition, Pendleton's Mack Bolan, a former [[United States Army]] [[Sergeant#United States|sergeant]] and [[Vietnam War]] veteran, was larger than life, responsible for killing hundreds of mobsters over the course of Pendleton's 38 novels. Like many pulp characters, Bolan left a trademark "[[Calling card (crime)|calling card]]" β in his case, a [[Marksmanship Badges (United States)|marksman's medal]]. After 15 Executioner novels, Pendleton became involved in a legal battle with the publisher, [[Kensington Books|Pinnacle Books]], over ownership of the series. Pinnacle had the next entry, ''The Executioner #16: Sicilian Slaughter,'' written by William Crawford under the pseudonym "Jim Peterson".<ref>Kenney, Joe. Glorious Trash. "A Study of Action-Adventure Fiction: The Executioner and Mack Bolan by William H. Young." Nov. 7, 2011</ref> Pendleton ignored "Sicilian Slaughter" and wrote The Executioner #17: ''Jersey Guns,'' as a sequel to #15, ''Panic in Philly,'' under a contract with [[New American Library]]. The contract was ultimately voided by the terms of his settlement with Pinnacle<ref>{{cite news|author=Kraft, David Anthony|author-link=David Anthony Kraft|title=The Executioner Speaks Out! |work=[[Marvel Preview]]|number=2|date= 1975|publisher= [[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref> and he returned to Pinnacle for 21 more novels.<ref name="Mengel2009">{{cite book|last=Mengel|first=Bradley|title=Serial Vigilantes of Paperback Fiction: An Encyclopedia from Able Team to Z-Comm|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xIPw0F6QWlYC&pg=PA66|date=16 September 2009|publisher=McFarland Press|location=Jefferson, NC|isbn=978-0-7864-5475-4|pages=66β67}}</ref> ====Spin-offs (1980βpresent)==== Since 1980, ''The Executioner, Mack Bolan'' books and spinoffs - [[Able Team]], [[Phoenix Force (novel)|Phoenix Force]], [[Stony Man]], and [[Mack Bolan]] - have been written by [[Harlequin Books|Harlequin]]'s team of writers. The Harlequin Gold Eagle books moved Bolan into a fight against [[terrorism]], in whose course he was given the cover identity of "Colonel John Macklin Phoenix." Since 1980, Harlequin has produced new novels, and the writer's name is mentioned on the copyright page as a provider of "a contribution" to the work, pushing the number of ''Mack Bolan'' novels into the hundreds; all of them bear the byline, ''Don Pendleton's Mack Bolan.''<ref name="Markert2016">{{cite book|last=Markert|first=John|title=Publishing Romance: The History of an Industry, 1940s to the Present|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yV_TCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT177|date=26 February 2016|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-1-4766-2124-1|pages=177β178|location=Jefferson, NC}}</ref> ===Joe Copp, Private Eye series (1987β1992) === Pendleton's other enduring series was the Joe Copp, Private Eye novels, told in the [[First-person narrative|first person]] by 6'3", 260 lb. Joe Copp, a [[private investigator]].<ref name="Server2014">{{cite book|last=Server|first=Lee|title=Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k54nLojgIrwC&pg=PA211|date=14 May 2014|publisher=[[Infobase Publishing]]|isbn=978-1-4381-0912-1|page=211}}</ref> The novels were [[Formula fiction|formulaic]] [[hardboiled]] [[detective fiction]], always opening in the middle of the story, with Copp pursuing a variety of criminals, with the story then [[Flashback (narrative)|flashing back]] to the beginning to describe how Copp got into his current predicament.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}} The Joe Copp series of six hardcover novels often had over-the-top action moments reminiscent to those found of [[Mickey Spillane]]'s [[Mike Hammer (character)|Mike Hammer]].<ref name="SarverMarkus1997">{{cite book|last1=Sarver|first1=Linda|last2=Markus|first2=Tom|title=A Novel Approach to Theatre: From Adams to Zola|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w2sjmtm6q4QC&pg=PA167|year=1997|publisher=[[Scarecrow Press]]|isbn=978-0-8108-3251-0|page=167}}</ref> The books were first published in hardcover by [[Donald I. Fine]] and then released in paperback by [[Harper & Row|Harper]]. ===Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective series (1986β1988)=== The first book of Don Pendleton's Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective series, ''Ashes to Ashes'', was published in 1986 by [[Warner Books]]. The Ashton Ford character is a former naval officer and spy, skilled in [[cryptology]] and able to see into the future. ==Bibliography== ===Mack Bolan novels=== *''War Against The Mafia'' (1969) *''Death Squad'' (1969) *''Battle Mask'' (1970) *''Miami Massacre'' (1970) *''Continental Contract'' (1971) *''Assault on Soho'' (1971) *''Nightmare in New York'' (1971) *''Chicago Wipe-Out'' (1971) *''Vegas Vendetta'' (1971) *''Caribbean Kill'' (1972) *''California Hit'' (1972) *''Boston Blitz'' (1972) *''Washington I.O.U.'' (1972) *''San Diego Siege'' (1972) *''Panic In Philly'' (1973) *''Jersey Guns'' (1974) *''Texas Storm'' (1974) *''Detroit Deathwatch'' (1974) *''New Orleans Knockout'' (1974) *''Firebase Seattle'' (1975) *''Hawaiian Hellground'' (1975) *''Canadian Crisis'' (1975) *''St. Louis Showdown'' (1975) *''Colorado Kill-Zone'' (1976) *''Acapulco Rampage'' (1976) *''Dixie Convoy'' (1976) *''Savage Fire'' (1977) *''Command Strike'' (1977) *''Cleveland Pipeline'' (1977) *''Arizona Ambush'' (1977) *''Tennessee Smash'' (1978) *''Monday's Mob'' (1978) *''Terrible Tuesday'' (1979) *''Wednesday's Wrath'' (1979) *''Thermal Thursday'' (1979) *''Friday's Feast'' (1979) *''Satan's Sabbath'' (1980) *''The Executioner's War Book'' (1977) "technical manual" and history of the War against the Mafia ===Joe Copp, Private Eye novels=== *''Copp for Hire'' (1987) *''Copp on Fire'' (1988) *''Copp in Deep'' (1989) *''Copp in the Dark'' (1990) *''Copp on Ice'' (1991) *''Copp in Shock'' (1992) ===Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective series=== *''Ashes to Ashes'' (1986) *''Eye to Eye'' (1986) *''Mind to Mind'' (1987) *''Life to Life'' (1987) *''Heart to Heart'' (1987) *''Time to Time'' (1988) ===Stewart Mann novels (as Stephan Gregory)=== *''Frame Up, Fresno'' (1960) *''The Insatiables'' (1967) *''The Sex Goddess'' (1967) *''Madame Murder'' (1967) *''The Sexy Saints'' (1967) *''The Hot One'' (1967) ===Other novels=== *''All the Trimmings'' (as Stephan Gregory) (1966) *''The Huntress'' (as Stephan Gregory) (1966) *''Color Her Adultress'' (as Stephan Gregory) (1967) *''All Lovers Accepted'' (as Stephan Gregory) (1968) *''Revolt'' (1968) *''The Olympians'' (1969) *''Cataclysm'' (1969) *''The Guns of Terra 10'' (1970) *''Population Doomsday'' (1970) *''The Godmakers'' (as Dan Britain, reissued as Don Pendleton) (1970) *''Civil War II'' (as Dan Britain, reissued as Don Pendleton) (1971) ===Nonfiction=== *''A Search for Meaning From the Surface of a Small Planet'' ===With Linda Pendleton=== ====Fiction==== *''Roulette: The Search for the Sunrise Killer'' *''War Against the Mafia Graphic Comic Novel Adaptation'' Part 1β3. Part 4 not published.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}} ====Nonfiction==== *''Whispers from the Soul: The Divine Dance of Consciousness'' *''The Metaphysics of a Novel: The Inner Workings of a Novel and Novelist'' *''To Dance With Angels'' *''The Cosmic Breath: Metaphysical Essays of Don Pendleton'' ==Adaptations== Numerous rumors of upcoming film treatments of the Executioner series have circulated over the years. It was announced August 2014 that [[Shane Salerno]], Hollywood producer and screenwriter, had optioned the Executioner novels for a film franchise.<ref name =movie>{{cite web|url=https://www.yahoo.com/news/bradley-cooper-shane-salerno-mack-bolan-films-095517783.html?ref=gs|title=Bradley Cooper, Shane Salerno for 'Mack Bolan' films|publisher=AFP Relax News|date=August 19, 2014|access-date=August 23, 2016|archive-date=September 20, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160920103215/https://www.yahoo.com/news/bradley-cooper-shane-salerno-mack-bolan-films-095517783.html?ref=gs|url-status=dead}}</ref> Spider-Man writer Gerry Conway (who went on to become a show runner on [[Dick Wolf]]'s ''[[Law & Order]]'' series) has acknowledged that his creation of Marvel's Punisher character was directly inspired by Pendleton's Executioner, in perhaps the most blatantly direct adaptation (or less politely, "lift") of Pendleton's character. Originally conceived as a villain for the Spider-Man comic book series, the character proved incredibly popular and the costumed version of the Executioner that became a comic book hero has taken Pendleton's original idea to comic-book-ridiculous extremes in comics, cinema and television, all carefully sidestepping any issues of creative ownership. ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== *{{official website|http://www.donpendleton.com }} *[http://www.executionerseries.com Original Executioner Series] {{The Executioner}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Pendleton, Don}} [[Category:1927 births]] [[Category:1995 deaths]] [[Category:20th-century American novelists]] [[Category:20th-century American male writers]] [[Category:American adventure novelists]] [[Category:American male novelists]] [[Category:Writers from Little Rock, Arkansas]] [[Category:United States Navy personnel of World War II]] [[Category:United States Navy personnel of the Korean War]] [[Category:Federal Aviation Administration personnel]] [[Category:NASA people]] [[Category:Martin Marietta people]]
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