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Paul Spike

American author, editor in chief and journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Paul Robert Spike is an American author, editor in chief and journalist. He is best known as the author of the 1973 memoir Photographs of My Father about the murder of his father, civil rights leader Robert W. Spike, in 1966.

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Career

Spike is the author of five books. His memoir Photographs of My Father (Knopf, 1973) is the most widely known; an autobiographical account of the murder of his father, civil rights leader Rev. Robert W. Spike,[1] the book was chosen by the New York Public Library as one of its "Ten Best Books of The Year."[citation needed]

His four other works include a collection of short stories, two political thrillers, and the cult novelization of Terry Gilliam's Jabberwocky which Spike composed under the pseudonym "Ralph Hoover".[2]

In 1997, Spike became the first American editor of the 150-year-old British humour magazine Punch which he relaunched as a weekly investigative and satirical gadfly,[3][4] but soon left.[5]

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Honors

In 1970 Spike received the John Train Humor Prize awarded by The Paris Review.[6]

Personal

Spike graduated from Columbia University in 1970.[7] He has a son and a daughter by author Maureen Freely, and a son by editor Alexandra Shulman, both former wives.[8][9] His brother is art historian John Spike.[10]

Bibliography

  • Bad News (short fiction), Holt Rinehart and Winston, 1971.[11]
  • Photographs of My Father (autobiography), Knopf, 1973.
  • Jabberwocky (as "Ralph Hoover"), Pan Books, 1976.
  • The Night Letter (novel), GP Putnams, 1978.
  • Last Rites (novel), New American Library, 1980.

References

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