The Denver Post

Author’s historical novels hit jackpot

- By Robert D. Mcfadden

John Jakes, a superstar writer of historical fiction whose generation­al family sagas of the American Revolution and the Civil War mingled real and imaginary characters and became runaway bestseller­s and popular television fare, died March 11 at a hospice facility in Sarasota, Fla. He was 90.

His death was confirmed by his lawyer and literary agent, Frank R. Curtis.

Jakes wrote some 60 novels, including westerns, mysteries, science and fantasy fiction, and children’s books. But he was best known for two series of novels with enormous mass- market appeal: “The Kent Family Chronicles,” eight volumes written in the 1970s to capitalize on the 1976 Bicentenni­al celebratio­ns ( 55 million copies were sold), and the “North and South” Civil War trilogy, which appeared in the 1980s ( 10 million copies).

By the 1990s, Jakes had joined the charmed circle of America’s big- name authors — among them Mary Higgins Clark, Tom Wolfe, James Clavell, Thomas Harris and Ira Levin — whose publishers paid millions in advances for multibook deals, although they had only vague ideas what the books might say. In 1990, Doubleday and Bantam paid Jakes $ 10 million for three novels as yet unwritten.

A modest, genial family man who for many years had thick bowl- cut gray hair, Jakes seemed ill suited for the celebrity life. He gave interviews, made promotiona­l appearance­s on television and was affable for long lines of people at his book signings. His chunky books were displayed prominentl­y at virtually every bookstore in the nation. But he seemed more at ease walking alone on a Civil War battlegrou­nd, or quietly researchin­g his books at local libraries in Hilton Head, S. C., and on Bird Key in Sarasota, where he lived much of the year.

“I feel a real responsibi­lity to my readers,” Jakes told The Washington Post in 1982. “I began to realize about two or three books into the Kent series that I was the only source of history that some of these people had ever had. Maybe they’ll never read a Barbara Tuchman book — but down at the Kmart they’ll pick up one of mine.”

Rarely taking a vacation, churning out as many as 5,000 words a day, Jakes made no pretense to lofty literary aspiration­s. Critics called him a journeyman storytelle­r who strived for historical accuracy, populating his books with the likes of Benjamin Franklin, Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis. Loyal readers devoured his accounts of his fictional characters’ abductions, adulteries, secret papers, contested fortunes and other staples of pulp fiction.

Jakes began freelance writing in his spare time while working in advertisin­g from 1954 to 1971. He published hundreds of short stories in Galaxy Science Fiction, Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine and other outlets. He also wrote paperback novels and even a few hardcovers, mostly westerns and fantasies, some under the pen names Jay Scotland and Alan Payne.

His breakthrou­gh came in 1974, when he was 42, with the publicatio­n of “The Bastard,” the first of eight hefty paperbacks collective­ly called “The Kent Family Chronicles.”

The books tracked generation­s of the Kents from the Revolution­ary War to 1890. “The Bastard” and its first two sequels, “The Rebels” and “The Seekers” ( both 1975), were adapted for television as miniseries in 1978 and 1979. Other books in the series were “The Furies” and “The Titans” ( both 1976), “The Warriors” ( 1977), “The Lawless” ( 1978) and “The Americans” ( 1979).

Although they were unabashed mass- market fiction, the Kent books touched a national nerve, coming amid the celebratio­ns of the 200th anniversar­y of the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. For many, they were an anodyne to the disillusio­nment of the Watergate scandal and the war in Vietnam, and they made Jakes one of the nation’s most popular writers.

His success prompted Harcourt Brace Jovanovich to commission his Civil War- era hardcover trilogy featuring two families, one in South Carolina and the other in Pennsylvan­ia, whose sons meet at West Point and become wartime enemies. The books, “North and South” ( 1982), “Love and War” ( 1984) and “Heaven and Hell” ( 1987) — known collective­ly as “North and South” — became ABC- TV miniseries in 1985, 1986 and 1994.

“If one is looking for a novel with purposeful­ness of craft, vivid characteri­zation or an insightful, revelatory vision of human events, ‘ North and South’ will be a disappoint­ment,” Mel Watkins wrote in The New York Times Book Review in 1982. “If, however, one is looking for an entertaini­ng, popularize­d and generally authentic dramatizat­ion of American history, without the weight of polemics on either side of the issues, then the first installmen­t of Jakes’s trilogy covering the events before, during and after the Civil War will meet his expectatio­ns.”

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