Robert M. Coates

Robert M. Coates
BornRobert Myron Coates
April 6, 1897 (1897-04-06)
New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.
DiedFebruary 8, 1973 (1973-02-09) (aged 75)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationWriter, art critic
EducationYale University
Literary movementLost Generation

Robert Myron Coates (April 6, 1897 – February 8, 1973) was an American novelist, short story writer and art critic. He published five novels; one classic historical work, The Outlaw Years (1930) which deals with the history of the land pirates of the Natchez Trace; a book of memoirs, The View from Here (1960), and two travel books, Beyond the Alps (1962) and South of Rome (1965). During his unusually varied career, Coates explored many different genres and styles of writing and produced three highly remarkable experimental novels, The Eater of Darkness (1926), Yesterday’s Burdens (1933) and The Bitter Season (1946). Highly original and experimental, these novels draw upon expressionism, Dadaism and surrealism. His last two novels—Wisteria Cottage (1948) and The Farther Shore (1955)—are examples of crime fiction. Simultaneously to working as a novelist, Coates maintained a life-long career at the New Yorker, whose staff he joined in 1927. The magazine printed more than a hundred of his short stories many of which were collected in three anthologies; All the Year Round (1943), The Hour after Westerly (1957) and The Man Just ahead of You (1964). Also, from 1937 to 1967, Coates was the New Yorker’s art critic and coined the term “abstract expressionism” in 1946 in reference to the works of Hans Hofmann, Arshile Gorky, Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning and others.[1][2][3][4] He was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1958. Coates was married to sculptor Elsa Kirpal from 1927 to 1946. Their first and only child, Anthony Robertson Coates, was born on March 4, 1934. In 1946, they divorced and Coates married short story writer Astrid Meighan-Peters. He died of cancer of the throat in New York City on February 8, 1973.[5]

Anthony Boucher praised Coates as "one of the most persuasive recorders of the unaccountable and disturbing moment," singling out his fantasy stories for their "haunting tone of uncertainty and dislocation."[6] Floyd C. Gale said that The Eater of Darkness "has been called the first surrealist novel in English".[7]

Maxim Lieber was Coates' literary agent from 1935 to 1938 and in 1941 and 1945.

  1. ^ New Yorker, Peter Schjeldahl, Big Bang
  2. ^ BBC The Power to Amaze, Abstract Expressionism
  3. ^ Abstract Expressionism, NY, MoMA
  4. ^ Clement Greenberg, Art and Culture Critical essays, ("American-Type Painting"), Beacon Press, 1961 p.:209, ISBN 978-0807066812
  5. ^ Wagle, Greta (2003). "Coates, Robert M[yron]". In Serafin, Steven R. (ed.). The Continuum Encyclopedia of American Literature. Bendixen, Alfred. London: Continuum Publishing. p. 207. ISBN 0-8264-1517-2. Retrieved May 30, 2010.
  6. ^ "Recommended Reading," F&SF, May 1957, p.77.
  7. ^ Gale, Floyd C. (August 1960). "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf". Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 117–121.