The Late John Marquand (42 page)

Read The Late John Marquand Online

Authors: Stephen; Birmingham

“A Thousand in the Bank,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 1, SS.

“The Tea Leaves,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 8, SS.

“The Blame of Youth,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 29, SS.

“The Spitting Cat,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 3, SS.

“Good Morning, Major,”
Saturday Evening Post
, December 11, SS.

1927

“The Artistic Touch,”
Saturday Evening Post
, February 19, SS.

“The Cinderella Motif,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 5, SS.

“Once and Always,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 9, SS.

“Lord Chesterfield,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 18, SS.

“The Unknown Hero,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 30, SS.

“The Harvard Square Student,”
Saturday Evening Post
, December 10, SS.

1928

“The Last of the Tories,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 24, SS.

“As the Case May Be,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 16, SS.

“Do Tell Me, Doctor Johnson,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 14, SS.

“Three Rousing Cheers,”
Cosmopolitan
, August, SS.

“Aye, in the Catalogue,”
Saturday Evening Post
, August 11, SS.

“The Good Black Sheep,”
Saturday Evening Post
, August 25, SS.

1929

“Warning Hill,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 23 through April 20, SN.

“End of the Story,”
Collier's
, April 6, SS.

“Oh, Major, Major,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 27, SS.

“Mr. Goof,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 4, SS.

“Rain of Right,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 11, SS.

“And Another Redskin—,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 18, SS.

“Darkest Horse,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 25, SS.

“The Powaw's Head,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 20, SS.

1930

WARNING HILL, N.

“Bobby Shaftoe,”
Saturday Evening Post
, February 8, SS.

“Leave Her, Johnny—Leave Her,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 15, SS.

“Simon Pure,”
Collier's
, July 5, SS.

“The Same Things,”
Saturday Evening Post
, August 2, SS.

“The Master of the House,”
Saturday Evening Post
, September 27, SS.

“There is a Destiny,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 8, SS.

“Rainbows,”
Saturday Evening Post
, December 20, SS.

1931

“Golden Lads,”
Saturday Evening Post
, February 14, SS.

“All Play,”
Woman's Home Companion
, April, SS.

“Upstairs,”
Saturday Evening Post
, August 8, SS.

“Tolerance,”
Saturday Evening Post
, October 17, SS.

“Gentlemen Ride,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 7, SS.

“Call Me Joe,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 28, SS.

1932

“Ask Him,”
Saturday Evening Post
, January 23, SS.

“The Music,”
Saturday Evening Post
, February 6, SS.

“Deep Water,”
Saturday Evening Post
, February 20, SS.

“Sold South,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 12, SS.

“Jine the Cavalry,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 16, SS.

“Jack Still,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 11, SS.

“Far Away,”
Saturday Evening Post
, August 13, SS.

“High Tide,”
Saturday Evening Post
, October 8, SS.

“Dispatch Box No. 3,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 5, SS.

“Fourth Down,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 19, SS.

1933

HAVEN'S END, N.

“Number One Good Girl,”
Saturday Evening Post
, October 14, SS.

1934

“‘Winner Take All,'”
Saturday Evening Post
, January 20 through February 17, SN.

“Davy Jones,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 3, SS.

“Blockade,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 24, SS.

“Step Easy, Stranger,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 14, SS.

“Lord and Master,”
Collier
's, April 21, SS.

“Time for Us to Go,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 28, SS.

“Take the Man Away,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 12, SS.

“Back Pay,”
American Magazine
, August, SS.

“Ming Yellow,”
Saturday Evening Post
, December 8 through January 12, 1935, SN.

1935

MING YELLOW, N.

“Mr. Moto Takes a Hand,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 30 through May 4, SN.

NO HERO (“Mr. Moto Takes a Hand”), N.

“Sea Change,”
Saturday Evening Post
, May 25, SS.

“A Flutter in Continentals,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 8, SS.

“You Can't Do That,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 22, SS.

“What's It Get You?”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 13, SS.

“Yankee Notion,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 2, SS.

1936

“Thank You, Mr. Moto,”
Saturday Evening Post
, February 8 through March 14, SN.

THANK YOU, MR. MOTO, N.

“Hang It on the Horn,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 21, SS.

“No One Ever Would,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 7, SS.

“A Young Man of Great Promise,”
Liberty
, June 13, SS.

“Put Those Things Away,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 20, SS.

“The Road Turns Back: The Author in Search of Earthly Paradise,”
Forum
, September, NF.

“Think Fast, Mr. Moto,”
Saturday Evening Post
, September 12 through October 17, SN.

“Don't You Cry for Me,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 21, SS.

“Troy Weight,”
Saturday Evening Post
, December 5, SS.

“The Late George Apley,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 28 through January 9, 1937, SN.

1937

THE LATE GEORGE APLEY, N.

THINK FAST, MR. MOTO, N.

“The Marches Always Pay,”
Saturday Evening Post
, January 30, SS.

“The Maharajah's Flower,”
Saturday Evening Post
, March 27, SS.

“‘3-3-8,'”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 10 through May 15, SN.

“Just Break the News,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 3, SS.

“Pull, Pull Together,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 24, SS.

“Think Fast, Mr. Moto,” screenplay by Howard Ellis and Norman Foster, August, MP.

“Everything Is Fine,”
Collier's
, October 9, SS.

“Thank You, Mr. Moto,” screenplay by Willis Cooper and Norman Foster, December, MP.

1938

“‘Castle Sinister,'”
Collier's
, February 12 through March 26, SN.

“Mr. Moto's Gamble,” screenplay by Charles Belden and Jerry Cady, March, MP.

“Shirt Giver,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 30, SS.

“Mr. Moto Takes a Chance,” screenplay by Lou Breslow and John Patrick, June, MP.

“Mr. Moto Is So Sorry,”
Saturday Evening Post
, July 2 through August 13, SN.

“Mysterious Mr. Moto,” screenplay by Philip MacDonald and Norman Foster, October, MP.

MR. MOTO IS SO SORRY, N.

1939

“Wickford Point,”
Saturday Evening Post
, January 28 through March 11, SN.

“Mr. Moto's Last Warning,” screenplay by Philip MacDonald and Norman Foster, January, MP.

“Mr. Moto in Danger Island,” screenplay by Philip Milne, April, MP.

“Beginning Now—,”
Saturday Evening Post
, April 8, SS.

“Do You Know the Brills?”
Saturday Review of Literature
, April 29, NF (humor).

“Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation,” screenplay by Philip MacDonald and Norman Foster, July, MP.

“Don't Ask Questions,”
Saturday Evening Post
, September 30 through November 11, SN.

WICKFORD POINT, N.

1940

“Gone Tomorrow,”
McCall's
, September through January, 1941, SN.

“Come On, Prince,”
McCall's
, March, SS.

“March On, He Said,”
Saturday Evening Post
, June 29, SS.

“Children's Page,”
Saturday Evening Post
, August 31, SS.

1941

H.M. PULHAM, ESQUIRE (“Gone Tomorrow”), N.

“My Boston: A Note on the City by Its Best Critic,”
Life
, March 24, NF.

“These Are People Like Ourselves,”
Asia
, July, NF.

“Mercator Island,”
Collier's
, September 6 through October 25, SN.

“H. M. Pulham, Esquire,” screenplay by Elizabeth Hill, December, MP.

1942

LAST LAUGH, MR. MOTO (“Mercator Island”), N.

“Merry Christmas, All,”
Cosmopolitan
, January, SS.

“Doctor's Orders,”
Collier's
, May 9, SS.

“Taxi Dance,”
Good Housekeeping
, May, SS.

“Good Soldiers Can't Be Introverts,”
Harper's Bazaar
, June, NF.

“It's Loaded, Mr. Bauer,”
Collier's
, June 13 through August 1, SN.

1943

SO LITTLE TIME, N.

“The Island,”
Good Housekeeping
, September, SS.

“I Heard an Old Man Say,”
Good Housekeeping
, October, SS.

1944

“The Late George Apley,” with George S. Kaufman, P.

“The End Game,”
Good Housekeeping
, March, SS.

1945

“Iwo Jima Before H-Hour,”
Harper's Magazine
, May, NF.

“Lunch at Honolulu,”
Harper's Magazine
, August, SS.

“Repent in Haste,”
Harper's Magazine
, October, November, SN.

REPENT IN HASTE, N.

1946

B. F.'S DAUGHTER, N.

1947

“The Late George Apley,” screenplay by Philip Dunne, April, MP.

“Why the Navy Needs Aspirin,”
Harper's Magazine
, August, NF.

“Close to Home,”
Good Housekeeping
, November, SS.

“Banking Is an Art,”
Atlantic Monthly
, November through January, 1948, SN.

1948

“B. F.'s Daughter,” screenplay by Luther Davis, March, MP.

“Point of No Return,”
Ladies' Home Journal
, December through April 1949, SN.

1949

POINT OF NO RETURN (incorporating “Banking Is an Art”), N.

“Return Trip to the Stone Age,”
Atlantic Monthly
, April, NF.

“Fitzgerald: ‘This Side of Paradise,'”
Saturday Review of Literature
, August 6, NF (book review).

1950

“Sun, Sea, and Sand,”
Cosmopolitan
, May, SS.

“The Gargle Case,”
Flair
, August (reprinted from the
Harvard Lampoon
, 1914), NF (humor).

1951

“Melville Goodwin, U.S.A.,”
Ladies' Home Journal
, May through December, SN.

MELVILLE GOODWIN, U.S.A., N.

1952

“Point of No Return,” by Paul Osborn, P.

“Inquiry into the Military Mind,”
New York Times Magazine
, March 30, NF.

“Two's Company,”
McCall's
, November, SS.

1953

“Boston,”
Holiday
, November, NF.

1954

THIRTY YEARS, collection of short fiction and nonfiction.

“Sincerely, Willis Wayde,”
Ladies' Home Journal
, November through March, 1955, SN.

1955

“‘Happy Knoll' Series,”
Sports Illustrated
, June through November, SS.

SINCERELY, WILLIS WAYDE, N.

1956

“‘Happy Knoll' Series,”
Sports Illustrated
, February, May, July, August, SS.

NORTH OF GRAND CENTRAL: THREE NOVELS OF NEW ENGLAND (“The Late George Apley,” “Wickford Point,” “H. M. Pulham, Esquire”).

“Apley, Wickford Point, and Pulham: My Early Struggles,”
Atlantic Monthly
, September, NF.

“Top Secret Affair” (“Melville Goodwin, U.S.A.”), screenplay by Roland Kibbe and Allan Scott, MP.

“Rendezvous in Tokyo,”
Saturday Evening Post
, November 24 through January 12, 1957, SN.

1957

LIFE AT HAPPY KNOLL, SS collected from
Sports Illustrated
.

STOPOVER: TOKYO (“Rendezvous in Tokyo”), N.

“Stopover: Tokyo,” screenplay by Richard L. Breen and Walter Reisch, MP.

1958

“Women and Thomas Harrow,”
Ladies' Home Journal
, July through November, SN.

WOMEN AND THOMAS HARROW, N.

1960

TIMOTHY DEXTER, REVISITED, NF.

*
It has not been possible to include, in this list of Marquand's published work, the many articles, stories, and humorous pieces he wrote as a
Harvard Lampoon
staffer and editor, or pieces written as a reporter and feature writer for the
Boston Transcript
and the
New York Herald
, or the various “fugitive” pieces he produced during his early writing years. Also not included are the many reviews he wrote as a judge for the Book-of-the-Month Club
News
. Check list is based on the John P. Marquand bibliographies prepared by William White.

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