Marcus Goodrich (Author of Delilah)
Marcus Goodrich

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Marcus Goodrich


Born
in San Antonio, The United States
November 28, 1897

Died
October 20, 1991


Marcus Aurelius Goodrich was an American screenwriter and novelist. He was the first husband of actress Olivia de Havilland. Their only son Benjamin was born on 1 December 1949. Before he was married to Elizabeth Norton, Henriette Alice McCrea-Metcalf, Caroline Sleeth, Renee Oakman.

He associated with the Ernest Hemingway group in Paris and was a protégé of Philip Wylie. He is best known for his 1941 novel Delilah.

Average rating: 3.72 · 58 ratings · 14 reviews · 7 distinct works
Delilah

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3.72 avg rating — 58 ratings — published 1941 — 26 editions
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Delilia

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Delilah

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DELILAH

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Delihah

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Deliah

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By Marcus Goodrich - Delila...

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Quotes by Marcus Goodrich  (?)
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“Her function in existence was to carry blasting destruction at high speed to floating islands of men;  and her intended destiny, at the opposite pole from that of the male bee, was to die in this act of impregnating her enemy with death.  It was, perhaps, for this reason that she carried her distinctly feminine bow, which was very high and sharp, with graceful arrogance and some slight vindictiveness, after the manner of a perfectly controlled martyr selected for spectacular and aristocratic sacrifice.  Her name was Delilah.”
Marcus Goodrich, Delilah

“[Lieutenant Fitzpatrick] would not have dared to make a gesture of reconciliation towards his friend [Seaman Warrington], nor speak the word that would have launched them...on one of the old conversations. Neither could Warrington have made the gesture or spoken the word...The very stress between them, largely monopolizing his emotions and reflections, was, in its polarization, a misery rich in significance, as rich, in that sense, as their harmony had been. Like the officer, if he could not restore the harmony, he clung to the conflict that still bound them. However, the striking think was not that they clung to the only bond that still seemed possible to them; but that they both actually seemed to be striving to protect and preserve, surviving carefully and with a kind of cold desperation, the framework of their quarrel as such.”
Marcus Goodrich, Delilah

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