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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Authors

William Lindsay Gresham

Added By: Engelbrecht
Last Updated: Engelbrecht


William Lindsay Gresham

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Full Name: William Lindsay Gresham
Born: August 20, 1919
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Died: September 14, 1962
New York City, New York, U.S
Occupation: Author
Nationality: American
Links:



Biography

Gresham was born in Baltimore, Maryland. As a child, he moved with his family to New York, where he became fascinated by the sideshow at Coney Island. Upon graduating from Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn in 1926, Gresham drifted from job to job, and worked as a folk singer in Greenwich Village.

His parents divorced when he was 16. His own first marriage also ended in divorce, as well as his second to a New Jersey socialite which fell apart after nine years when he returned to America, embittered by his experiences in Spain. In 1937, Gresham served as a volunteer medic for the Loyalist forces during the Spanish Civil War. There, he befriended a former sideshow employee, Joseph Daniel "Doc" Halliday, and their long conversations inspired much of his work, particularly Gresham's two books about the American carnival, the nonfiction Monster Midway and the fictional Nightmare Alley.

Returning to the United States in 1939, after a troubling period that involved a stay in a tuberculosis ward and a suicide attempt, Gresham found work editing true crime magazines. In 1942, Gresham married Joy Davidman, a poet, with whom he had two children, David and Douglas.

In 1946 he published Nightmare Alley, his first and most successful novel. It was purchased by Hollywood for $60,000 and made into a film of the same name in 1947 starring Tyrone Power. Gresham and Davidman moved into a sprawling fourteen-room house in Staatsburg, New York.

Gresham was an unfaithful and alcoholic husband. Davidman, an ethnically Jewish atheist, became a fan of the writings of C. S. Lewis, which led eventually to her conversion to Christianity. Within a year or so Gresham was calling himself a Christian, which influenced his second and last novel, Limbo Tower. However, the couple struggled financially and Gresham would have tax problems for many years to come. Davidman complained to friends of his frequent drinking, serial infidelity, and even occasional eruptions of violence. At this time Gresham also became interested in Dianetics, the 1950 self-help book by science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard. Although an early enthusiast of Scientology, he later denounced the religion as another kind of spook racket.

Suffering from an illness, Davidman decided to go to England in 1952 to seek out C.S. Lewis, with whom she'd been corresponding. She invited her cousin, Renée Rodriguez--who was fleeing an abusive husband with her two small children--to keep house for her family in her absence. Gresham and Rodriguez soon began an affair.

Gresham wrote to Davidman in January 1953 saying that they had become lovers and she returned to New York, enduring an awkward period where all three of them were living under the same roof because none could afford to go anywhere else.

Davidman sold the house to pay off the Internal Revenue Service and moved to England with the boys. Later she married Lewis, their relationship forming the inspiration for the play and movie Shadowlands.

Gresham married Rodriguez as soon as the divorce was finalized. After Davidman's untimely death, Gresham visited England to see his sons. When it became apparent that they were well cared for, he left them in C. S. Lewis' care.

Gresham joined Alcoholics Anonymous and developed a deep interest in Spiritualism, having already exposed many of the fraudulent techniques of popular spiritualists in his two sideshow-themed books and having written a book about Houdini with the assistance of noted skeptic James Randi. Twenty-four of his articles and stories on fairgrounds, spookshows and hucksters were republished in 2013 as Grindshow: the Selected Writings of William Lindsay Gresham.


Works in the WWEnd Database

 Non Series Works

 (1946)