Thomas Alexander Boyd
Thomas Alexander Boyd (July 3, 1898 – January 27, 1935) was an American journalist and novelist, born in Defiance, Ohio. He was raised by his mother's family due to his father's death before he was born. While still in school, he and a friend enlisted in the US Marine Corps and saw service in France, where he was gassed in 1918.
Upon discharge from the occupation forces in 1919, Boyd tried several occupations before becoming a writer for newspapers in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota. He opened a bookstore, Kilmarnock Books, in St. Paul, which became the locus of literary figures, including Sinclair Lewis. He was urged to write and produced the 1923 novel, "Through the Wheat," based in part on his own war experiences.
Boyd later remarried and became interested in Socialist causes during the Depression, eventually running as the Communist candidate for governor of Vermont.
He died suddenly in 1935 of a stroke.
Selected works of Thomas Boyd
- Through the Wheat (1923) novel
- Points of Honor (1925) stories
- Shadow of the Long Knives (1928) novel
- Simon Girty, the White Savage (1928) biography
- Mad Anthony Wayne (1929) biography
- Light-Horse Harry Lee (1931) biography
- Poor John Fitch (1935) biography
- In Time of Peace (1935) novel
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