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NGE >> Literature >> Fiction >> Authors >> Vereen Bell (1911-1944) |
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Vereen Bell (1911-1944) Vereen Bell wrote fiction and magazine articles set in the southern outdoors, and he achieved popular success with Swamp Water, a coming-of-age novel set in the Okefenokee Swamp. A World War II (1941-45) naval officer, Bell was killed during the Battle for Leyte Gulf. The son of Jennie Vereen and Reason Chesnutt Bell,
Bell worked briefly as an editor at the Detroit, Michigan-based American Boy/Youth's Companion, but he preferred to write as a freelancer from his south Georgia home. In the late 1930s his outdoor stories and wildlife photography routinely sold to Collier's and the Saturday Evening Post. His two novels, Swamp Water and Two of a Kind, first appeared serially in the Post. Swamp Water (1940) follows a defiant young man into the wild Okefenokee,
In World War II Bell volunteered for navy air combat intelligence duty. He was a lieutenant assigned to the escort carrier USS Gambier Bay when the ship was sunk October 25, 1944, near Samar in the Philippines. In 1947 Bell's college roommate, D. Grier Martin, established the Vereen Bell Award for creative writing at Davidson College in Davidson, North Carolina, in his memory. Suggested Reading Vereen M. Bell Jr., foreword to Swamp Water (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1981). National Cyclopedia of American Biography, vol. 39 (New York: J. T. White, 1954), s.v. "Vereen McNeill Bell." Obituary, Publishers Weekly, December 30, 1944. Alexander Sesonske, "Jean Renoir in Georgia: Swamp Water," Georgia Review 36 (spring 1982): 24-66. Keith Hulett, University of Georgia Libraries Published 7/11/2002 |
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