Edmund Naughton
Edmund Naughton (1926–2013) was an American writer and journalist whose first novel, ''McCabe'' (1959), was the basis for the 1971 film ''McCabe & Mrs. Miller''. The film, directed by Robert Altman, is now considered a masterpiece. After 1958, Naughton lived in France and England. Between 1959 and 1984, Naughton published six novels in the genres of westerns and crime fiction. The first two were published in French translation as well as English; the last two were published only in translation.Naughton was born and raised in New York City and educated in Catholic schools. He received a bachelor's degree from Boston College in 1948, and an M.F.A. degree from Fordham University in 1953. He became a police reporter for ''The Courier-Journal'' in Louisville, Kentucky. As described in a short biographical notice, "he stayed for 5 years on the police beat, which he worked down to an average of an hour & a half's work per day. The rest of the time he spent playing cards and drinking beer with policemen. Once he went on an actual manhunt with them. He wrote ''McCabe'' in 1957-1958, largely out of his experience on the police beat, transposing his characters to the West." In 1958 Naughton moved to Paris, France, where he worked for the ''International Herald Tribune'', ''The New York Times'', and as an English teacher.
''McCabe'', which had been well-reviewed by Nelson C. Nye in ''The New York Times'', was translated into French as ''La Belle Main'' in 1960, and into German as ''Keine Chance für McCabe'' in 1966. He published his second novel, ''The Pardner'', in 1971, which was also promptly translated into French (as ''Oh! collègue''). In association with the 1971 film based on it, ''McCabe'' was published in new editions and a new translation into Italian (''I Compari''). The novel was last reprinted as a mass market paperback in 1992.
Naughton published four more novels. ''A Case in Madrid'' was published in 1973 and ''The Maximum Game'' in 1975. Two more novels appeared only in French translation: ''Les Cow-boys dehors!'' (1982 - ''Wild Horses'') and ''Grand Noir et le petit Blanc'' (1984 - ''White Man, Black Man''). French critic included Naughton in the ''Dictionnaire des littératures policières'' (lit. ''Dictionary of Crime Literature''). Mesplède writes that Naughton lost his job as a journalist in Louisville following public revelations that he was homosexual, and that this episode motivated his emigration from the United States to Europe. Provided by Wikipedia