Books by O. Henry
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Quotes by O. Henry
Turn up the lights — I don't want to go home in the dark. |
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Perhaps there is no happiness in life so perfect as the martyr's. |
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What is the world at its best but a little round field of the moving pictures with two walking together in it? |
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A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows. |
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A burglar who respects his art always takes his time before taking anything else. |
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Take it from me — he's got the goods. |
O. Henry's Biography
Prolific American short-story writer a master of surprise endings who wrote about the life of ordinary people in New York City. Typical for O. Henry's stories is a twist of plot which turns on an ironic or coincidental circumstance. Although some critics were not so enthusiastic about his work the public loved it.
O. Henry was born William Sydney Porter in Greenboro North Carolina. His father Algernon Sidney Porter was a physician. When William was three his mother died and he was raised by his parental grandmother and paternal aunt. William was an avid reader but at the age of fifteen he left school and then worked in a drug store and on a Texas ranch. He continued to Houston where he had a number of jobs including that of bank clerk. After moving in 1882 to Texas he worked on a ranch in LaSalle County for two years. In 1887 he married Athol Estes Roach; they had one daughter and one son.
In 1894 Porter started a humorous weekly The Rolling Stone. It was at this time that he began heavy drinking. When the weekly failed he joined the Houston Post as a reporter and columnist. In 1894 cash was found to have gone missing from the First National Bank in Austin where Porter had worked as a bank teller. When he was called back to Austin to stand trial Porter fled to Honduras to avoid trial. Little is known about Porter's stay in Central America. It is said that he met one Al Jennings and rambled in South America and Mexico on the proceeds of Jenning's robbery. After hearing news that his wife was dying he returned in 1897 to Austin. In 1897 he was convicted of embezzling money although there has been much debate over his actual guilt. Porter entered in 1898 a penitentiary at Columbus Ohio.
While in prison Porter started to write short stories to earn money to support his daughter Margaret. His first work 'Whistling Dick's Christmas Stocking' (1899) appeared in McClure's Magazine. The stories of adventure in the U.S. Southwest and in Central America gained an immediately success among readers. After doing three years of the five years sentence Porter emerged from the prison in 1901 and changed his name to O. Henry. According to some sources he acquired the pseudonym from a warder called Orrin Henry. It also could be an abbreviation of the name of a French pharmacist Eteinne-Ossian Henry found in the U.S. Dispensatory a reference work Porter used when he was in the prison pharmacy.
O. Henry moved to New York City in 1902 and from December 1903 to January 1906 he wrote a story a week for the New York World also publishing in other magazines. Henry's first collection CABBAGES AND KINGS appeared in 1904. The second THE FOUR MILLION was published two years later and included his well-known stories 'The Gift of the Magi' about a poor couple and their Christmas gifts and 'The Furnished Room'. THE TRIMMED LAMP (1907) explored the lives of New Yorkers and included 'The Last Leaf' - the city itself Henry liked to call 'Bagdad-on the-Subway.' In this sentimental piece about two women artists and their failed artist friend the theme is selfishness as in 'The Gift of the Magi' but there is also a lesbian undercurrent which separates it from O. Henry's run-of-the-mill works. In 'One Dollar's Worth' O. Henry criticized the merciless judicial system. Judge Derwent receives a letter from an ex-convict in which the writer 'Rattlesnake' threatens his daughter and the district attorney Littlefield. A young Mexican Rafael Ortiz is accused of passing a counterfeit silver dollar made principally of lead. Rafael's girl Joya Treviñas tells Littlefield that he is innocent - she was sick and needed medicine and that was the reason why Rafael used the dollar. Littlefield refuses to help and Joya says that "it the life of the girl you love is ever in danger remember Rafael Ortiz." When he drives out of the town with Nancy Derwent they meet Mexico Sam the writer of the letter. He starts to shoot them from distance with his rifle. Littlefield can't hurt him with his own gun which has only tiny pellets. Then he remembers Joya's words and manages hit Mexico Sam who falls from his horse dead as a rattlesnake. Next morning in the court he tells: "'I shot him' said the district attorney 'with Exhibit A of your counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me - and somebody else - that it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely. Say Kil can't you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know.'"
Henry's best known work is perhaps the much anthologized 'The Ransom of Red Chief' (see Howard Hawks and Nunnally Johnson) published in the collection Whirligigs in 1910. O. Henry's humorous energetic style shows the influence of Mark Twain and Ambrose Bierce. The story tells about two kidnappers who make off with the young son of a prominent man. They find out that the child is a real nuisance. In the end they agree to pay the boy's father to take him back. - "Sam" says Bill "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade. but I couldn't help it. I'm a grown person with masculine proclivities and habits of self-defense but there is a time when all systems of egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I sent him home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times" goes on Bill "that suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they enjoyed. None of 'em ever was subjugated to such supernatural tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of depredation; but there came a limit."
HEART OF THE WEST (1907) presented western stories of which 'The Last of the Troubadours' J. Frank Dobie named "the best range story in American fiction." 'The Caballero's Way' featured as a character the Cisco Kid. During his life time O. Henry published 10 collections and over 600 short stories. His last years were shadowed by alcoholism ill health and financial problems. He was a fast writer like the Russian Anton Checkhov (1860-1904) but drinking on average two quarts of whiskey daily did not improve the quality of his work. In 1907 O. Henry married Sara Lindsay Coleman also born in Greensboro. The marriage was not happy and they separated a year later. O. Henry died of cirrhosis of the liver on June 5 1910 in New York. Three more collections SIXES AND SEVENS (1911) ROLLING STONES (1912) and WAIFS AND STRAYS (1917) appeared posthumously. In 1918 the O. Henry Memorial Awards were established to be given annually to the best magazine stories the winners and leading contenders to be published in an annual volume.
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008
O. Henry was born William Sydney Porter in Greenboro North Carolina. His father Algernon Sidney Porter was a physician. When William was three his mother died and he was raised by his parental grandmother and paternal aunt. William was an avid reader but at the age of fifteen he left school and then worked in a drug store and on a Texas ranch. He continued to Houston where he had a number of jobs including that of bank clerk. After moving in 1882 to Texas he worked on a ranch in LaSalle County for two years. In 1887 he married Athol Estes Roach; they had one daughter and one son.
In 1894 Porter started a humorous weekly The Rolling Stone. It was at this time that he began heavy drinking. When the weekly failed he joined the Houston Post as a reporter and columnist. In 1894 cash was found to have gone missing from the First National Bank in Austin where Porter had worked as a bank teller. When he was called back to Austin to stand trial Porter fled to Honduras to avoid trial. Little is known about Porter's stay in Central America. It is said that he met one Al Jennings and rambled in South America and Mexico on the proceeds of Jenning's robbery. After hearing news that his wife was dying he returned in 1897 to Austin. In 1897 he was convicted of embezzling money although there has been much debate over his actual guilt. Porter entered in 1898 a penitentiary at Columbus Ohio.
While in prison Porter started to write short stories to earn money to support his daughter Margaret. His first work 'Whistling Dick's Christmas Stocking' (1899) appeared in McClure's Magazine. The stories of adventure in the U.S. Southwest and in Central America gained an immediately success among readers. After doing three years of the five years sentence Porter emerged from the prison in 1901 and changed his name to O. Henry. According to some sources he acquired the pseudonym from a warder called Orrin Henry. It also could be an abbreviation of the name of a French pharmacist Eteinne-Ossian Henry found in the U.S. Dispensatory a reference work Porter used when he was in the prison pharmacy.
O. Henry moved to New York City in 1902 and from December 1903 to January 1906 he wrote a story a week for the New York World also publishing in other magazines. Henry's first collection CABBAGES AND KINGS appeared in 1904. The second THE FOUR MILLION was published two years later and included his well-known stories 'The Gift of the Magi' about a poor couple and their Christmas gifts and 'The Furnished Room'. THE TRIMMED LAMP (1907) explored the lives of New Yorkers and included 'The Last Leaf' - the city itself Henry liked to call 'Bagdad-on the-Subway.' In this sentimental piece about two women artists and their failed artist friend the theme is selfishness as in 'The Gift of the Magi' but there is also a lesbian undercurrent which separates it from O. Henry's run-of-the-mill works. In 'One Dollar's Worth' O. Henry criticized the merciless judicial system. Judge Derwent receives a letter from an ex-convict in which the writer 'Rattlesnake' threatens his daughter and the district attorney Littlefield. A young Mexican Rafael Ortiz is accused of passing a counterfeit silver dollar made principally of lead. Rafael's girl Joya Treviñas tells Littlefield that he is innocent - she was sick and needed medicine and that was the reason why Rafael used the dollar. Littlefield refuses to help and Joya says that "it the life of the girl you love is ever in danger remember Rafael Ortiz." When he drives out of the town with Nancy Derwent they meet Mexico Sam the writer of the letter. He starts to shoot them from distance with his rifle. Littlefield can't hurt him with his own gun which has only tiny pellets. Then he remembers Joya's words and manages hit Mexico Sam who falls from his horse dead as a rattlesnake. Next morning in the court he tells: "'I shot him' said the district attorney 'with Exhibit A of your counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me - and somebody else - that it was as bad money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely. Say Kil can't you go down to the jacals and find where that Mexican girl lives? Miss Derwent wants to know.'"
Henry's best known work is perhaps the much anthologized 'The Ransom of Red Chief' (see Howard Hawks and Nunnally Johnson) published in the collection Whirligigs in 1910. O. Henry's humorous energetic style shows the influence of Mark Twain and Ambrose Bierce. The story tells about two kidnappers who make off with the young son of a prominent man. They find out that the child is a real nuisance. In the end they agree to pay the boy's father to take him back. - "Sam" says Bill "I suppose you'll think I'm a renegade. but I couldn't help it. I'm a grown person with masculine proclivities and habits of self-defense but there is a time when all systems of egotism and predominance fail. The boy is gone. I sent him home. All is off. There was martyrs in old times" goes on Bill "that suffered death rather than give up the particular graft they enjoyed. None of 'em ever was subjugated to such supernatural tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of depredation; but there came a limit."
HEART OF THE WEST (1907) presented western stories of which 'The Last of the Troubadours' J. Frank Dobie named "the best range story in American fiction." 'The Caballero's Way' featured as a character the Cisco Kid. During his life time O. Henry published 10 collections and over 600 short stories. His last years were shadowed by alcoholism ill health and financial problems. He was a fast writer like the Russian Anton Checkhov (1860-1904) but drinking on average two quarts of whiskey daily did not improve the quality of his work. In 1907 O. Henry married Sara Lindsay Coleman also born in Greensboro. The marriage was not happy and they separated a year later. O. Henry died of cirrhosis of the liver on June 5 1910 in New York. Three more collections SIXES AND SEVENS (1911) ROLLING STONES (1912) and WAIFS AND STRAYS (1917) appeared posthumously. In 1918 the O. Henry Memorial Awards were established to be given annually to the best magazine stories the winners and leading contenders to be published in an annual volume.
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008
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O. Henry Cabbages and Kings
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Part 1