[Article from The Citizen Advertiser, Auburn, N.Y., Saturday, November 11, 1933]
He Wanted Civilization
But Mowery Now Writes About Wild Places
William Byron Mowery (1899 - 1957) Photo courtesy EBay seller |
William Byron Mowery,
author of "Forbidden Valley," the Citizen
Advertiser’s serial of the Canadian woods, spends much of leisure exploring
with an airplane.
At the age of 11 he left his family's migratory,
"chicken-wagon" home and started out to see the world. For 18 months
he tramped about the country, visiting 30-odd states. After a winter's trapping
in the Athabasca country, he roamed the United States for another two years
and. then entered high school at 18.
Yearning for "civilization” was responsible for his
graduation from Ohio State University and the University of Illinois, where he
joined the English department faculty, later going to the University of Texas
in a similar position.
His writing career started when he read a "north
woods" story in which description and details were so inaccurate that
Mowery determined he could do better himself. Editors seemed to agree and in
three years he produced more than 400 published stories. He did not receive
wide recognition as an author, however, until he began taking more time on
stories and sharply curtailed his output.
The Mowery family, headed by the man who once wanted only
"Civilizing Influences,” now spends the major portion of the year in
out-door activities, exploring, mountain-climbing and camping.
"Forbidden Valley”
is a story of the Canadian, forests, packed with action, drama and a full-sized
helping of romance. The first installment will appear in The Citizen-Advertiser Monday, November 13.
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