*Julian Hawthorne (1846–1934)
From American Fantastic Tales: Terror and the Uncanny from Poe to the Pulps*
During a career lasting six decades, Julian Hawthorne (the only son of Nathaniel Hawthorne) published nineteen novels, 150 novellas and stories, and over 3,000 other works: essays, journalism, reviews, poems, historical works, travelogues, biography, children’s books, and more. His recent biographer Gary Scharnhorst, who has read more of this stuff than probably any other person alive, says that the total output comes to several million words and that Julian “out-published his father by a ratio of more than twenty to one.”
Yet one of the deeds for which this prolific author is most remembered is his felony conviction for his role, as a 69-year-old celebrity, in the sale of several million shares for silver mines that didn’t exist.
“Julian Hawthorne would have been a public intellectual had he been an intellectual,” quips Scharnhorst, sharing the general critical assessment that much of this mass of writing—with a scattering of exceptions—is deservedly out of print and forgotten. When Peter Straub prepared Library of America’s Read “Absolute Evil” by Julian Hawthorne