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245:. His tales were historical in setting, often featuring immense wild landscapes, and were "addressed to boys, written for boys" without any moralistic preaching or many political details. In book form his fiction appears to have retained a popularity from the 1900s into the 1950s, when it went out of fashion. Three of his books form a trilogy:
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Despite the relative success of his regularly published books, which he wrote at the steady rate of 200 words a day, he appears to have led a life of genteel and ever-declining poverty. By the mid-1920s he was rooming in the notorious
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H. P. Lovecraft was a loyal friend of his, especially liking McNeil for his freshness and his "childlike naivete". Lovecraft's "The Pigeon-Flyers", part of his late weird sonnet cycle
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thing, which he says is published out of Chi, but I ain't saw it yet. I'll tip it a wink the next time I lamp a news stand." -- Lovecraft letter to Morton, 29 March 1923, in
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area of New York, where his rooms became the early core of the Kalem Club. He died in 1929 shortly after ill health caused him to move in with his sister in
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257:(1918). Most of his novels were published by E.P. Dutton. McNeil also wrote short stories and magazine articles, and occasional humorous poetry.
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He had a short career in the early cinema in New York from 1912 to 1917, as a scriptwriter, including as writer on major features such as
198:(25 September 1862 – 14 December 1929) was a leading children's author of the 1910s and 1920s, and was an original and core member of the
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McNeil's fiction was published under the name 'Everett McNeil' and consisted of boys' adventure books and stories for magazines such as
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titled "How To Write A Photoplay" suggests he was also writing for the movies prior to 1912.
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The Boy Forty-Niners, or, Across the plains and mountains to the gold-mines of
California
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H. P. Lovecraft's tribute on the death of
Everett McNeil, in: H. P. Lovecraft's
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The Shores of
Adventure, or, Exploring in the New World with Jacques Cartier
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The Totem of Black Hawk: A Tale of
Pioneer Days in Northwestern Illinois
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In Texas with Davy
Crockett; a story of the Texas War of Independence
435:. 1930, reprinted Plutarch Press 1971 and Gale 1974. Pages 153-158.
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The Lost
Treasure Cave, or, Adventures with the cowboys of Colorado
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With Kit Carson in the
Rockies: A Tale of the Beaver Country
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Fighting with
Fremont: a tale of the conquest of California
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American children's author and friend of H.P. Lovecraft
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Lovecraft's New York Circle: The Kalem Club, 1924-1927
306:As of 2011 his works are now in the public domain.
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51:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
395:Daniel du Luth, or Adventuring on the Great Lakes
501:. Pittsburgh, PA. 15 December 1929. p. 9
427:Good Old Mac: Henry Everett McNeil, 1862—1929
358:The Cave of Gold: A Tale of California in '49
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454:The Lovecraft Letters: Letters from New York
316:Dickon Bend-the-Bow and other Wonder Tales
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633:20th-century American short story writers
111:Learn how and when to remove this message
369:"The King of the Golden Woods" story in
495:"Author McNeil Dies on Visit to Tacoma"
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433:Wisconsin writers: sketches and studies
383:Buried Treasure: A Tale of an Old House
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49:adding citations to reliable sources
322:The Hermit of the Culebra Mountains
266:The Making Over of Geoffrey Manning
247:The Hermit of the Culebra Mountains
638:20th-century American male writers
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628:American male short story writers
268:(1915). His July 1911 article in
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569:Works by or about Everett McNeil
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643:Novelists from New York (state)
608:20th-century American novelists
36:needs additional citations for
473:"McNeil tipped me too to that
262:The Martyrdom of Philip Strong
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212:magazine in the early 1920s.
543:Children's literature portal
220:McNeil was born in 1862 in
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618:Writers from New York City
479:Letters to James F. Morton
442:. Hippocampus Press, 2006.
407:The Shadow of the Iroquois
228:. He was a veteran of the
481:, Hippocampus Press 2011.
280:Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan
202:circle around the writer
623:Novelists from Wisconsin
499:Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph
449:, Vol.3, pp. 92–94.
613:American male novelists
560:Works by Everett McNeil
401:For the glory of France
429:, Burslem Press, 2013.
389:Tonty of the iron hand
251:The Lost Treasure Cave
60:"Henry Everett McNeil"
603:Milton College alumni
456:. Night Shade, 2005.
551:Henry Everett McNeil
288:Who's Who in America
271:Moving Picture World
230:Spanish–American War
222:Stoughton, Wisconsin
196:Henry Everett McNeil
146:Stoughton, Wisconsin
127:Henry Everett McNeil
45:improve this article
452:H. P. Lovecraft.
296:Fungi from Yuggoth
284:Tacoma, Washington
162:Tacoma, Washington
143:September 25, 1862
564:Project Gutenberg
234:Greenwich Village
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155:December 14, 1929
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593:1929 deaths
588:1862 births
505:17 November
264:(1916) and
209:Weird Tales
101:August 2016
582:Categories
461:References
425:D. Haden,
242:Boys' Life
200:Kalem Club
176:Occupation
139:1862-09-25
71:newspapers
216:Biography
249:(1904),
168:Pen name
571:at the
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