Pete Dexter | |
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Born |
Pontiac, Michigan, United States |
July 22, 1943
Occupation | Novelist, screenwriter |
Genre | Fiction |
Pete Dexter (born July 22, 1943) is an American novelist.
Dexter won the U.S. National Book Award in 1988 for his novel Paris Trout.
Dexter was born in Pontiac, Michigan. His father died when Dexter was four; and he and his mother moved to Milledgeville, Georgia, where she married a college Physics professor. He earned his undergraduate degree in 1969 from the University of South Dakota, which awarded him an honorary Doctor of Letters and Literature in 2010.
He was a columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News,The Sacramento Bee, and syndicated to many newspapers such as the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Prior to that he worked for what is now The Palm Beach Post in West Palm Beach, Florida, but quit in 1972 because the paper's owners forced the editorial page editor to endorse Richard Nixon over George McGovern.
He began writing fiction after a life-changing 1981 incident in which a mob of locals in the neighborhood of Schuylkill, Philadelphia, armed with baseball bats and upset by a recent column about a drug deal-gone-wrong murder, beat the writer severely. The brother of the homicide victim was a bartender at a local bar in the Schuylkill neighborhood and Dexter went to the bar to talk to him because the family had called the newspaper to complain. Dexter was roughed up at that meeting and later returned with his friend heavyweight prizefighter Randall "Tex" Cobb. In the fight that occurred outside the bar in the street, Cobb received a broken arm that cost him a shot at WBA heavyweight champion Mike Weaver., and Dexter was hospitalized with several injuries, including a broken back, pelvic bone, brain damage, and dental devastation.