John Hersey Popular Books

John Hersey Biography & Facts

John Richard Hersey (June 17, 1914 – March 24, 1993) was an American writer and journalist. He is considered one of the earliest practitioners of the so-called New Journalism, in which storytelling techniques of fiction are adapted to non-fiction reportage. In 1999, Hiroshima, Hersey's account of the aftermath of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, was adjudged the finest work of American journalism of the 20th century by a 36-member panel associated with New York University's journalism department. Background Hersey was born in Tianjin, China, the son of Grace Baird and Roscoe Hersey, Protestant missionaries for the YMCA in Tianjin. Hersey learned to speak Chinese before he spoke English. Later he based his novel, The Call (1985), on the lives of his parents and several other missionaries of their generation. John Hersey was a descendant of William Hersey (or Hercy, as the family name was then spelled) of Reading, Berkshire, England. William Hersey was one of the first settlers of Hingham, Massachusetts in 1635. Hersey returned to the United States with his family when he was ten years old. He attended public school in Briarcliff Manor, New York, including Briarcliff High School for two years. At Briarcliff, he became his troop's first Eagle Scout. Later he attended the Hotchkiss School. He studied at Yale University, where he was a member of the Skull and Bones Society along with classmates Brendan Gill and Richard A. Moore.: 127  Hersey lettered in football at Yale, where he was coached by Ducky Pond, Greasy Neale, and Gerald Ford. He was a teammate of Larry Kelley and Clint Frank, Yale's two Heisman Trophy winners. He subsequently was selected as a Mellon Fellow for graduate study at Clare College, Cambridge. Career After his time at Cambridge, Hersey got a summer job as private secretary and driver for author Sinclair Lewis during 1937. He chafed at those duties, and that autumn he began work for Time, for which he was hired after writing an essay on the magazine's dismal quality. Two years later (1939) he was transferred to Time's Chongqing bureau. In 1940, William Saroyan lists him among "contributing editors" at Time in the play Love's Old Sweet Song. During World War II, Newsweekly correspondent Hersey covered the fighting in Europe and Asia. He wrote articles for Time and Life magazines. He accompanied Allied troops on their invasion of Sicily, survived four airplane crashes, and was commended by the Secretary of the Navy for his role in helping evacuate wounded soldiers from Guadalcanal. Before writing Hiroshima, Hersey published his novel Of Men and War, an account of war stories seen through the eyes of soldiers rather than a war correspondent. One of the stories in Hersey's novel was inspired by future President John F. Kennedy, who also happened to be a former paramour of Hersey's wife Frances Ann. During the Solomon Islands campaign, Kennedy commanded a PT-109 that was cut in half by a Japanese destroyer. He led the rescue of his crew, personally towing the injured to safety.: 37  After the war, during the winter of 1945–46, Hersey was in Japan, reporting for The New Yorker on the reconstruction of the devastated country, when he found a document written by a Jesuit missionary who had survived the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The journalist visited the missionary, who introduced him to other survivors. Reporting from Hiroshima At exactly fifteen minutes past eight in the morning on August 6, 1945, Japanese time, at the moment when the atomic bomb flashed above Hiroshima, Miss Toshiko Sasaki, a clerk in the personnel department of the East Asia Tin Works, had just sat down at her place in the plant office and was turning her head to speak to the girl at the next desk. Soon afterward John Hersey began discussions with William Shawn, an editor for The New Yorker, about a lengthy piece on the previous summer's bombing. Hersey proposed a story that would convey the cataclysmic narrative through individuals who survived. In May 1946, Hersey traveled to Japan, where he spent three weeks doing research and interviewing survivors. He returned to America during late June and began writing the stories of six Hiroshima survivors: a German Jesuit priest, a widowed seamstress, two doctors, a minister, and a young woman who worked in a factory. The resulting piece was his most notable work, the 31,000-word article "Hiroshima", which was published in the August 31, 1946, issue of The New Yorker. The story dealt with the atomic bomb dropped on that Japanese city on August 6, 1945, and its effects on the six survivors. The article occupied almost the entire issue of the magazine – something The New Yorker had never done before. Later books and college master's job Hersey often decried the New Journalism, although he had helped create it. He would probably have disagreed that his "Hiroshima" article should be described as New Journalism. Later, the ascetic Hersey came to feel that some elements of the New Journalism of the 1970s were not rigorous enough about fact and reporting. After publication of Hiroshima, Hersey noted that "the important 'flashes' and 'bulletins' are already forgotten by the time yesterday morning's paper is used to line the trash can. The things we remember are emotions and impressions and illusions and images and characters: the elements of fiction." Soon after writing Hiroshima, the former war correspondent began publishing mostly fiction. Hersey's war novel The Wall (1950) was presented as a rediscovered journal recording the genesis and destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto, the largest of the Jewish ghettos established by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust. The book became a bestseller. It also won the National Jewish Book Award in 1950, the second year after the award was established; and won the Sidney Hillman Foundation Journalism Award. In 1950, during the Red Scare, Hersey was investigated by the FBI for possible Communist sympathies related to his past speeches and financial contributions, for example to the American Civil Liberties Union. The activities of his brother and other reporters were also investigated.: 164  His article "Why Do Students Bog Down on First R? A Local Committee Sheds Light on a National Problem: Reading" (1954), about the dullness of grammar school readers in an issue of Life magazine, inspired Dr. Seuss's children's story The Cat in the Hat. He also criticized the school system in his novel The Child Buyer (1960), a speculative fiction. Hersey's first novel A Bell for Adano, about the Allied occupation of a Sicilian town during World War II, won the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel in 1945. It was adapted that year as a movie of the same name, A Bell for Adano, directed by Henry King, and featuring John Hodiak and Gene Tierney. His 1956 short novel, A Single Pebble, recounts the journey of a young American engineer traveling up the Yangtze on a river junk during the 1920s. He learns that his roman.... Discover the John Hersey popular books. Find the top 100 most popular John Hersey books.

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  • Mr. Straight Arrow synopsis, comments

    Mr. Straight Arrow

    Jeremy Treglown

    A monumental reevaluation of the career of John Hersey, the author of HiroshimaFew are the books with as immediate an impact and as enduring a legacy as John Hersey’s Hiroshima. Fi...

  • War without Mercy synopsis, comments

    War without Mercy

    John Dower

    WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD  AN AMERICAN BOOK AWARD FINALIST  A monumental history that has been hailed by The New York Times as “one of the mos...

  • The Child Buyer synopsis, comments

    The Child Buyer

    John Hersey

    An imaginary, utterly absorbing record of the investigations of the Committee on Education, Welfare, and Public Morality of an unnamed state senate into the activities of Mr. Wisse...

  • The Marmot Drive synopsis, comments

    The Marmot Drive

    John Hersey

    The Marmot Drive, a novel of extraordinary force and craftsmanship, deals with certain events on two summer days in an outoftheway Connecticut village. The occasion is the decision...

  • Blues synopsis, comments

    Blues

    John Hersey

    From the revered Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and writer, comes his National Bestseller on one of the world’s oldest and most popular activities, fishing. Presented in narrati...

  • Life After John Hersey High School synopsis, comments

    Life After John Hersey High School

    Matt Liberatore

    Deciding what career you want to pursue can sometimes seem like an overwhelming task.  This book will help you find and use the resources available to help you explore possibl...

  • Antonietta synopsis, comments

    Antonietta

    John Hersey

    A saga of a magnificent violin, Antonietta, named after a beautiful woman who was the inspiration of Antonio Stradivari's later years. As Hersey brings Mozart, Berlioz, and Stravin...

  • A Single Pebble synopsis, comments

    A Single Pebble

    John Hersey

    A young American engineer sent to China to inspect the unruly Yangtze River travels up through the river's gorges searching for dam sites. Pulled on a junk hauled by fortyodd track...

  • White Lotus synopsis, comments

    White Lotus

    John Hersey

    Not too far from now, in a world very like our own, the oppressors have changed places with the oppressed.  After their defeat in the Yellow War, the white people of Amer...

  • Hiroshima synopsis, comments

    Hiroshima

    John Hersey

    Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist and bestselling author John Hersey's seminal work of narrative nonfiction which has defined the way we think about nuclear warfare.  “One...

  • Here to Stay synopsis, comments

    Here to Stay

    John Hersey

    In Here to StayJohn Hersey tells of episodes in the past twenty years in which Man has courageously risen above desperate situations and shown his determination to survive des...

  • A Bell for Adano synopsis, comments

    A Bell for Adano

    John Hersey

    This classic novel and winner of the Pulitzer Prize tells the story of an ItalianAmerican major in World War II who wins the love and admiration of the local townspe...

  • The Conspiracy synopsis, comments

    The Conspiracy

    John Hersey

    Nero’s secret police believe they have come on the first hints of a plot against the emperor’s life. Once promising and giftedfriend of poets, pupil of the great SenecaNero has now...

  • Under the Eye of the Storm synopsis, comments

    Under the Eye of the Storm

    John Hersey

    This is a tale of the sea, of two men and their wives on a sailboat, moving toward the heart of a great storm. It is an adventure story that carries four travelers on the yawl Harm...

  • The Wall synopsis, comments

    The Wall

    John Hersey

    Riveting and compelling, The Wall tells the inspiring story of forty men and women who escape the dehumanizing horror of the Warsaw ghetto. John Hersey's novel documents the Warsaw...

  • The Call synopsis, comments

    The Call

    John Hersey

    An American missionary in China, David Treadup, is the protagonist of John Hersey’s magnificent novel, a novel whose richness of character, color, and incident both explores the ev...

  • Key West Tales synopsis, comments

    Key West Tales

    John Hersey

    Alternating a tale of the past that has become a part of Key West legend with a contemporary story that reflects the pulse of life there today, Hersey weaves in these stories a bri...

  • The War Lover synopsis, comments

    The War Lover

    John Hersey

    In the immediate sense, this long, eventful and agonizingly suspenseful novel shows what fear, secret hidden fear, can do to even one of those seeming heroes, a war lover. In the l...

  • Fallout synopsis, comments

    Fallout

    Lesley M.M. Blume

    ONE of THE NEW YORK TIMES'S 100 NOTABLE BOOKS of the YEAR A VANITY FAIR and TOWN & COUNTRY BEST BOOK of the YEAR New York Times bestselling author Lesley M.M. Blume reveals ...

  • My Petition For More Space synopsis, comments

    My Petition For More Space

    John Hersey

    A street in New Haven. A line of people, blocks long, more closely packed than the rushhour subways of the good old times.          ...

  • The President synopsis, comments

    The President

    John Hersey

    The President has given me permission to take a kind of voyage with himto watch him closely through a working week….I will be with him, most of the time, hour in and hour out…. ...

  • Life Sketches synopsis, comments

    Life Sketches

    John Hersey

    This collectionharvest of a lifetime of brilliant reportage and reflectionbrings together the most memorable biographical pieces John Hersey has written over the past fifty years. ...

  • The Walnut Door synopsis, comments

    The Walnut Door

    John Hersey

    Writing at the height of his powers, John Hersey has created a taut, dazzling novel of suspense and revelationin which we watch, mesmerized, the fateful convergence of two lives.&#...

  • Too Far to Walk synopsis, comments

    Too Far to Walk

    John Hersey

    Is there anywhere a young man so dull he would not sell his soul for experience? In this striking new novel, quite different from anythign he has written before, John Hersey probes...