Vincent Starrett


Charles Vincent Emerson Starrett, known as Vincent Starrett, was a Canadian-born American writer, newspaperman, and bibliophile.

Biography

Charles Vincent Emerson Starrett was born above his grandfather's bookshop in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His father moved the family to Chicago in 1889 where Starrett attended John Marshall High School.
Starrett landed a job as a cub reporter with the Chicago Inter-Ocean in 1905. When that paper folded two years later he began working for the Chicago Daily News as a crime reporter, a feature writer, and finally a war correspondent in Mexico from 1914 to 1915. Starrett turned to writing mystery and supernatural fiction for pulp magazines during the 1920s and 1930s.
In 1920, he wrote a Sherlock Holmes pastiche entitled "The Adventure of the Unique 'Hamlet'". Starrett on at least one occasion said that the press-run was 100 copies, but on others claimed 200; a study of surviving copies by Randall Stock documents 110. This story involved the detective investigating a missing 1604 inscribed edition of Shakespeare's play 'Hamlet.
Starrett's most famous work,
The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, was published in 1933. Following that, Starrett wrote a book column, "Books Alive," for The Chicago Tribune. He retired after 25 years of the column in 1967. Starrett was one of the founders of The Hounds of the Baskerville, a Chicago chapter of The Baker Street Irregulars.
Starrett's horror/fantasy stories were written primarily for the pulp magazine
Weird Tales, and are collected in The Quick and the Dead,. His story "Penelope," published in the May 1923 issue of Weird Tales, was also featured in the anthology The Moon Terror anonymously edited by Farnsworth Wright, and published by the magazine.
Starrett's other writing included poetry, collected in
Autolycus in Limbo,, detective novels, such as Murder on 'B' Deck,.
He had also created his own detective character, Chicago sleuth Jimmie Lavender, whose adventures usually first appeared in the pulp magazine
Short Stories. The name Jimmie Lavender was that of an actual pitcher for the Chicago Cubs; Starrett wrote to ask the ball player for permission to use his name for a gentleman detective, which the pitcher granted. The stories are collected in The Case Book of Jimmie Lavender.
Starrett was a major enthusiast of Welsh writer Arthur Machen and was instrumental in bringing Machen's work to an American audience for the first time.
A complete edition of Starrett's works is being published by George Vanderburgh's Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, a print-on-demand publisher, with 22 of a projected 25 volumes already in print. A publication in the Vincent Starrett Memorial Library is
Sherlock Alive, compiled and edited by Karen Murdock, and first printed in August of 2010. Sherlock Alive is a collection of the Sherlockian references from Starrett's "Books Alive" column.
His influential weekly column "Books Alive" ran in Chicago Tribune for 25 years. He also wrote
Best Loved Books of the 20th Century'', a collection of 52 essays discussing popular works, published in 1955.

Film adaptations

Among his film adaptions his 1934 story Recipe for Murder first published in Redbook magazine in one installment was filmed as The Great Hotel Murder by Fox in 1935.