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  1. Nov 4, 2019 · In 1905, the Tarkingtons returned to Europe, where their only child, Laurel, was born early the following year in Rome. They then moved to Paris, eventually taking a long lease on an apartment...

  2. Adams Tarkington made a far more significant contribution to American fiction in the 1920's than many an admired rover of the Riviera, Paris, Provincetown and Greenwich Village could possibly

  3. A novelist, playwright, essayist, and briefly a politician, Tarkington produced a total of 171 short stories, 21 novels, 9 novellas, and 19 plays along with a number of movie scripts, radio dramas, and even illustrations over the course of a career that lasted from 1899 until his death in 1946.

  4. Tarkington had already met Harry Leon Wilson, who had pub lished two novels, and had decided to write for the stage. A Middle Westerner on tour, Wilson joined the Tarkingtons in Paris, traveled with them to Capri, to Rome, then to Champigny, where the two men agreed to write a play. Their first collaboration, The

  5. Feb 3, 2010 · The first of Tarkingtons The Growth Trilogy, The Turmoil, was published in 1915, and written before the Great War had broken out.

  6. Newton Booth Tarkington (July 29, 1869 – May 19, 1946) was an American novelist and dramatist best known for his novels The Magnificent Ambersons (1918) and Alice Adams (1921). He is one of only four novelists to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction more than once, along with William Faulkner, John Updike, and Colson Whitehead.

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  8. Booth Tarkington (1869-1946), American playwright and author, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1919 for his novel The Magnificent Ambersons (1918) and again in 1922 for Alice Adams (1921), later adapted to the screen starring Katherine Hepburn.

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