John Toland (historian)

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Template:Short description Template:Other people Template:More citations needed Template:Infobox writer John Willard Toland (June 29, 1912 – January 4, 2004)<ref name=barnes/> was an American writer and historian. He is best known for a biography of Adolf Hitler<ref name=AP/> and a Pulitzer Prize-winning history of World War II-era Japan, The Rising Sun.

Biography

Toland was born in 1912 in La Crosse, Wisconsin. He graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire in 1932 and from Williams College in 1936 and attended the Yale School of Drama for a time.<ref name=barnes /> His original goal was to become a playwright. In the summers between college years, he traveled with hobos and wrote several plays with hobos as central characters, none of which were performed. He recalled in 1961 that in his early years as a writer he had been "about as big a failure as a man can be".<ref name=barnes /> He claimed to have written six complete novels, 26 plays, and a hundred short stories before completing his first sale, a short story for which The American Magazine paid $165 in 1954.<ref name=barnes /> At one point he managed to get an article on dirigibles into LOOK magazine; it proved extremely popular and led to his career as a historian. Dirigibles were the subject of his first full-length published book, Ships in the Sky (1957).<ref name=barnes />

His most important work may be The Rising Sun (Random House, 1970), for which he won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction in 1971.<ref name=pulitzer>"General Nonfiction". The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 2013-11-12.</ref> Based on original and extensive interviews with high-ranking Japanese officials who survived the war, the book chronicles the Empire of Japan from the military rebellion of February 1936 to the end of World War II. It won the Pulitzer because it was the first book in English to tell the history of the Pacific War from the Japanese point of view, rather than the prevailing American one.Template:Cn

Novels

While predominantly a writer of nonfiction, Toland also published two historical novels, Gods of War and Occupation. He says in his 1997 autobiography that he earned little money from his prize-winner The Rising Sun but was set for life from the earnings of Adolf Hitler, for which he also did original research.Template:Cn

Death

Toland died of pneumonia on January 4, 2004, at Danbury Hospital in Danbury, Connecticut.<ref name=barnes />

Books

Non-Fiction Template:External media

Novels

Articles

  • 'Death of a Dirigible', February 1959, American Heritage, Volume X Number 2, pp 18–23

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:PulitzerPrize GeneralNon-Fiction 1962–1975 Template:Authority control