Sorry I'm late? I didn't intend to be gone for what amounts to four weeks, but upon returning from our fantastic vacation (thank you very much, parents), both my sister and I were struck with some pretty nasty sinus infections. She was much worse than I was, but I was bad enough that it was hard to concentrate on writing. My voice was also affected, so there have been no new podcast episodes because it hurt to talk that much. I'm hoping that the orange boys will help me with a new one in the next few days; we'll see if they feel like cooperating.
James graduated from Doylestown's public high school in 1925 - not the current one, but the one which stood at the intersection of Court and Broad Streets, where his historical marker is located. He attended Pennsylvania's Swarthmore College on a full scholarship, where he was a basketball player, and received a bachelor's degree in English and history. From there he traveled abroad, spending two years in Scotland studying at the University of Saint Andrews. He returned to his native Pennsylvania and began teaching, starting as a high school English teacher in Pottstown. From 1933 to 1936, he taught English in Newtown, and during that time he married his first wife, Patti Koon. They relocated to Colorado, where James earned a masters degree in education at what today is the University of Northern Colorado. He taught there for a few years; the university later named their library in his honor, and maintains a permanent display of some of his personal effects.
James spent a year as a guest lecturer at Harvard University before joining the Navy to serve in World War II. He received multiple assignments to travel throughout the South Pacific Ocean, serving as a naval historian. Later in life, he confessed that he got these gigs because of a case of mistaken identity - for some reason, people thought he was the son of Admiral Marc Mitscher, and well, I guess he didn't bother to correct them at the time. I can't really blame him. At the age of 40, in 1947, his notes and recollections of these assignments became his breakout book, Tales of the South Pacific. It earned him the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1948, the same year that he and Patti divorced, and was adapted into the Broadway musical South Pacific by Rodgers and Hammerstein in 1949.
His attempts at writing for television didn't properly pan out; the plan was to do a weekly series based on Tales From the South Pacific, but Rodgers and Hammerstein had bought all the dramatic rights to the novel and weren't willing to give them back. He later, however, assisted with the creation of the 1959 series Adventures in Paradise. He continued to churn out a prolific number of books, as well as entering politics. He chaired a committee in Bucks County to get John F. Kennedy elected President in 1960, and in 1962 he attempted himself to take one of Pennsylvania's seats in the House of Representatives. He lost, and always said it was a mistake to have even tried, though he also asserted that he learned a lot from the experience.
James was married three times. He married his second wife, Vange Nord, the same year that he divorced Patti, but divorced her in 1955 and married Mari Yoriko Sabusawa, who as a child had been forced to live in Japanese internment camps during World War II. James's novel Sayonara is somewhat autobiographical with relation to his third marriage, as it focuses on the cross-cultural romance between an Air Force pilot and a Japanese woman. James and Mari remained married until her death. He had no children with any of his wives; he and second wife Vange took in a pair of foster sons at one point, but after the marriage ended they were returned to the orphanage.
Mari Michener died in 1994, by which time James had developed terminal kidney disease. He continued to receive dialysis for a few more years, but after he celebrated his 90th birthday, he decided that he had accomplished everything he wanted and didn't need to continue the difficult treatment any longer. He died on October 16, 1997; per his wishes, he was cremated and his ashes were interred with Mari in Austin Memorial Park Cemetery. Companions in death as well as life, the Micheners share a pinkish marble headstone. Mari's half identifies her as "Philanthropist, Art Lover, Wife." For James, it reads, "Traveler, Citizen, Writer." This reflects his belief, as he often stated, that "The world is my home."
Sources and Further Reading:
Biography of James Michener at the Pennsylvania Center for the Book
Guttridge, Peter. "Obituary: James Michener." The United Kingdom Independent, October 17, 1997.
Official website of the James A. Michener Society
Official website of the Michener Art Museum
James A. Michener at FindAGrave.com
Except where indicated, all writing and photography on this blog is the intellectual property of Laura Klotz. This blog is written with permission of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. I am not employed by the PHMC. All rights reserved.
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