Richard P. Powell
Richard Pitts Powell, professionally known as Richard P. Powell, was an American novelist.
Biography
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Powell graduated from Princeton University in 1930 then worked at the Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger newspaper. After ten years, he joined the advertising agency N. W. Ayer & Son. Following service on Gen. Douglas MacArthur's staff during World War II, he returned to N.W. Ayer, where he rose to vice president of information services in 1952.In the 1940s, Powell began writing fiction, and his first published books were Inner Sanctum Mysteries, published from 1943 to 1955. By the mid-1950s, he was able to devote himself to writing full time. The Philadelphian, his major publishing debut, spent more than six months on the bestseller list, and was filmed in 1959 as The Young Philadelphians, starring Paul Newman. Two of his other novels also were adapted into films.
Richard Powell died on December 8, 1999, in Fort Myers, Florida.
Novels
- Don’t Catch Me
- All Over but the Shooting
- Lay that Pistol Down
- Shoot if You Must
- And Hope to Die
- Shark River
- Shell Game
- The Build-Up Boys
- A Shot in the Dark, republished with Shell Game in 2008,
- Say It with Bullets, republished in 2006, Dorchester Publishing Hard Case Crime,
- False Colors
- The Philadelphian, republished in 2006, Plexus Publishing,
- Pioneer, Go Home!,. Filmed in 1962 as Follow That Dream starring Elvis Presley.
- The Soldier
- I Take this Land
- Daily and Sunday
- Don Quixote, U.S.A.
- Tickets to the Devil,
- Whom the Gods Would Destroy
In film
- The Philadelphian was made into the movie The Young Philadelphians, starring Paul Newman, Barbara Rush and Robert Vaughn, who received an Academy Award nomination for his role.
- The Build-Up Boys was made into a 1961 film renamed Madison Avenue.
- Pioneer, Go Home! was made into a 1962 film renamed Follow That Dream, starring Elvis Presley.
- The 1971 Woody Allen movie Bananas also uses elements of Don Quixote, U.S.A. in its plot.