Lurton Blassingame

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Lurton Blassingame (February 10, 1904 – April 1988) was a literary agent of long career based in New York City, a Howard College- and Columbia University-trained journalist whose clients included Robert A. Heinlein and Frank Herbert.

Early life and education

Blassingame was born on February 10, 1904 in Fort Smith, Arkansas, and moved with his family—he had a sister, Alice—afterward, to Auburn, Alabama, with his first university degree coming from Howard College in Birmingham.[when?][1] He moved to New York City, completing a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University.[1][when?] His Master's thesis focused on the history of pulp fiction.[citation needed]

Career

Blassingame's first job was as a writer in Hollywood.[citation needed] While yet in his 20's (ca. 1929), he founded the agency that he would run for nearly 50 years, mostly in the borough of Manhattan in New York City.[1] In 1937-1938, he and writer William Allen founded the American Library Foundation in California.[clarification needed][citation needed]

He saw a major success in 1943 representing Rosemary Taylor in the publication of Chicken Every Sunday, a best seller from McGraw-Hill (made into motion picture in 1948).[1]

Blassingame's public relations operation, named Houston Branch Associates,[citation needed] was "one-man", and he sold it off in 1979[1]—to Eleanor Wood, where it became part of Spectrum Literary Agency.[citation needed] He retired in 1980.[1]

Clientele and dedications