Story Published:
Jan 16, 2004 at 4:02 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:23 AM PDT
PORT TOWNSEND - Jack Cady, a rough-and-tumble former
truck driver, warehouse worker and landscaper who became an
acclaimed author and creative writing teacher, is dead at 71.
Cady, winner of the Nebula, Phillip K. Dick, World Fantasy and
Bram Stoker awards for science fiction, died Wednesday at Jefferson
General Hospital of complications of bladder cancer, said Carol
Orlock, his wife of 27 years and a writer.
His novels include "The Hauntings of Hood Canal " in 2001,
"The Off Season" in 1996 and "Street: A Novel" in 1995, all
published by St. Martin's Press, and "Inagehi," published in 1993
by Broken Moon Press.
Born in Columbus, Ohio, Cady worked as a truck driver
intermittently until his late 30s and for a time ran his own
landscape construction business.
He spent four years with the Coast Guard in Maine, then earned a
bachelor's degree at the University of Louisville in 1961. Four
years later he received the Atlantic Monthly's Atlantic First Award
for the short story "The Burning."
In the Web transcript of an interview for Event Horizon's
Flashpoint in 1999, Cady said he was a truck driver and auctioneer
in Louisville at the time, pounding a Royal manual typewriter while
seated in his truck.
"Looking back on it, I think it (the award) was a fluke," he
said. "I still had to learn how to write."
Greater recognition arrived with the Iowa Prize for Short
Fiction in 1972 for "The Burning and Other Stories."
From 1968 to 1973 he was an assistant professor at the
University of Washington in Seattle, and from the late 1970s to the
mid-80s, he wrote as a free-lancer, including a column in the
Peninsula Daily News in Port Angeles.
In 1986 he won a Pacific Northwest Excellence in Journalism
Award for education reporting.
In 1992 he received a $20,000 creating writing fellowship from
the National Endowment for the Arts.
He retired from college teaching in 1999 after 13 years at
Pacific Lutheran University outside Tacoma. "The American
Writer," his survey of American literary thought from 1620 to the
1970s, was published that same year by St. Martin's.
Cady's horror, fantasy and ghost stories often featured vivid
depictions of real-life settings from areas around his adopted home
at the northeast tip of the Olympic Peninsula.
"The Off Season," for example, was described in Library
Journal as "an offbeat, whimsical tale (that) recounts the history
of Point Vestal, a Pacific Northwest coastal town where ghosts walk
the streets in broad daylight."
"Jack always thought of ghosts as representing forces in
history the evil and goodness in the world collected," Orlock
said. "He embodied those ghostly forces in his stories."
Other survivors include four children from a previous marriage
and two sisters. Orlock said Cady will be cremated in a private
ceremony, followed by a celebration of his life and art in Port
Townsend in March.
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