- Born
- Died
- Birth nameJames Thomas Harrison
- Jim Harrison was born on December 11, 1937 in Grayling, Michigan, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for Wolf (1994), Revenge (1990) and Legends of the Fall (1994). He was married to Linda King. He died on March 26, 2016 in Patagonia, Arizona, USA.
- SpouseLinda King(October 10, 1959 - October 2, 2015) (her death, 2 children)
- Jim Harrison wrote the book "Legends of the Fall" (which contains the title novella, "Revenge," and one other short novel) over the course of a long weekend, during which he was snowed in his writer's shack and unable to leave.
- Harrison was born December 11, 1937, in Grayling, Michigan. He married Linda King in 1959 and had two daughters. The grandson of farmers and son of an agricultural extension agent, Harrison grew up in small Michigan towns where he developed a love of books and a primal bond with the outdoors. He would associate his childhood with simple pleasures and ongoing loss, a general longing for simpler times and the physical handicap of his blind left eye, injured at age 7 when a neighborhood girl jammed a bottle in his face. In the 1950s and 60s he drifted between studies at Michigan State University and the Beat scene in Boston, where he met Jack Kerouac, and New York City, where he taught briefly before returning to rural Michigan. In 1965, Harrison debuted as a poet with "Plain Song." Life as an outdoors-man inadvertently made him a novelist. In the late 1960s he slipped off a bank along the Manistee River in Michigan, injured his back, lapsed into a semi-coma and for about two years was forced to wear a corset. His close friend Tom McGuane suggested he try a full-length work of fiction since Harrison "could no longer do anything to avoid it." Harrison's first novel, "Wolf: A Fake Memoir," came out in 1971 and was followed two years later by a work of fiction about the ecology, "A Good Day to Die." But he was devastated by the commercial failure of his novel "Farmer" and was so broke, he recalled, that he couldn't pay his taxes, and couldn't fill out a scholarship form for his daughter because he was required to include records from the IRS. His turnaround involved a true Hollywood twist. Harrison was visiting his in-laws' home when he came upon the journals of his wife's great-grandfather William Ludlow and was inspired to write a story. What became "Legends of the Fall" was made possible by a $15,000 loan from Jack Nicholson. "And now the one-eyed goofy, the black-sheep poet ... has inadvertently struck it rich," Harrison later wrote of his mid-life success. "After the first full year of this experience I was sitting on the porch of our recently remodeled farmhouse, triple the estimated time and expense and a thoroughly enervating process, reading the Detroit Free Press and noting that I had made more money in the last year than the president of General Motors, Harlow Curtis. I idly hoped Harlow Curtis was happy in his work".
- He was known as a gourmet cook and something of a gourmand. His food writing was collected in "The Raw and the Cooked".
- He wrote about 40 books including prose, poetry, essays and memoir, and had his work translated into 27 languages.
- Harrison's feature film screenplay credits also included "Revenge," starring Kevin Costner, and the Jack Nicholson feature film "Wolf." But Harrison would liken the unpredictable and nerve-racking script-writing process to being trapped in a "shuddering elevator" and reminded himself of his marginal status by inscribing a put-down by a Hollywood executive, "You're just a writer," on a piece of paper, taping the paper quote above his writing desk.
- [on watching your own movie] Sitting there in the dark, before the projector starts, you have the distinct feeling you might be raped by an elephant or - if your imagination is running to the sea - a whale.
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