Thorne Smith Quotes

James Thorne Smith, Jr. was an American writer of humorous supernatural fantasy fiction under the byline Thorne Smith. He is best known today for the two Topper novels, comic fantasy fiction involving sex, much drinking and ghosts. With racy illustrations, these sold millions of copies in the 1930s and were equally popular in paperbacks of the 1950s.

Smith drank as steadily as his characters; his appearance in James Thurber's The Years with Ross involves an unexplained week-long disappearance. When asked why he hadn't called-in sick, he retorted, "The telephone was in the hall and there was a draft." Smith was born in Annapolis, Maryland, the son of a Navy commodore, and attended Dartmouth College. Following hungry years in Greenwich Village, working part-time as an advertising agent, Smith achieved meteoric success with the publication of Topper in 1926. He was an early resident of Free Acres, a social experimental community developed by Bolton Hall according to the economic principles of Henry George in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey. He died of a heart attack in 1934 while vacationing in Florida. Wikipedia  

✵ 27. March 1892 – 21. June 1934
Thorne Smith photo
Thorne Smith: 1   quote 0   likes

Thorne Smith Quotes

Similar authors

Stephen King photo
Stephen King 733
American author
Ray Bradbury photo
Ray Bradbury 401
American writer
Arthur Conan Doyle photo
Arthur Conan Doyle 166
Scottish physician and author
George Raymond Richard Martin photo
George Raymond Richard Martin 35
American writer, screenwriter and television producer
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien photo
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien 78
British philologist and author, creator of classic fantasy …
David Foster Wallace photo
David Foster Wallace 185
American fiction writer and essayist
Robert A. Heinlein photo
Robert A. Heinlein 557
American science fiction author
Isaac Asimov photo
Isaac Asimov 303
American writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston Uni…
Andrzej Sapkowski photo
Andrzej Sapkowski 18
Novelist
Frank Herbert photo
Frank Herbert 158
American writer