Kelly Ray Masters

Kelly Ray Masters (June 16, 1897 – 1987), was an American writer using the pen name Zachary Ball. He is known best for Joe Panther, Bristle Face, and other adventure novels for boys.[1]

Life and career

Masters was born in the Blackjack Hills west of Princeton, Missouri, to Abelino and Iva (Herrick) Masters in 1897. Between the ages of six and thirteen, he lived in southeast Kansas near Altoona and spent much of his boyhood boating, rafting, and camping along the Verdigris River.[2] "I was still a boy when I first met Old Man River, he later said, "and I got to know him well."[2] Masters dropped out of school at 13 in order to support his family first with a riprap gang building retaining walls along the Missouri River[2] and then through working in a series of factory jobs in Kansas City, Kansas, and St. Joseph, Missouri. In 1914, while working as a bellhop at the St. Joseph, he joined a small tent repertory show and spent the next twenty-five years touring almost every state in the union with various troupes and as part of a musical act with his younger brother.

Masters married his wife Gladys (Green) in 1931 and had a son, Kelly Ray Jr, in 1938.[3] While living in Austin, Texas, he began to sell stories to magazines of widely varying quality in an attempt to supplement his income. Masters took the pen name Zachary Ball by combining the names of two of his favorite movie stars: Zachary Scott and Lucille Ball. Eventually he would co-write several short stories for the Saturday Evening Post and Collier's with author Frankie-Lee Weed. Weed wrote under the pseudonym Saliee O'Brien. The pair submitted stories under Weed's pen name (Saliee O'Brien) when the lead character was a woman and under Ball's name when a man. Ball published two books for adults, Pull Down to New Orleans (1945) and Piney (1950), before turning to children's fiction for the school library market.

Books for boys

From his experiences growing up in Kansas and Missouri along the river, Masters decided to write books for boys using the river or ocean as backgrounds.[2] Masters' first seven books for boys would share this common theme. Joe Panther (1950), a novel about a young Seminole in south Florida, was Master's first juvenile work. The plot centers around Joe Panther as he comes of age outside the Florida Everglades by trying to enter the establishment (white man's world). He gets work as crew member on a fishing boat, hunts for alligators, and has cathartic encounters with bad guys trying to bring illegal aliens into Florida on fishing boats. Joe Panther was adapted as a motion picture in 1976 and starred Ray Tracey in the title role, Brian Keith as Captain Harper, Ricardo Montalban as Turtle George, Alan Feinstein as Rocky, Cliff Osmond as Rance, and A Martinez as Billy Tiger and directed by Paul Krasny.[4] Joe Panther spawned a number of sequels by Masters including Swamp Chief (1952), Skin Diver (1956), and Salvage Diver (1961).

Bristle Face (1962), one of Ball's many tales prominently featuring boys and their dogs, received the Dorothy Canfield Fisher and William Allen White children's book awards for 1964 and 1965, respectively. The story is based on runaway teen Jase Landers who is befriended first by stray dog Bristle Face and then lazy shop owner Lute Swank and their adventures together as Jase, Lute, and the grand-fatherly neighbor Emory Packer teach Bristle Face to hunt foxes. Similar in many ways to the 1961 novel Where The Red Fern Grows, the book is a coming-of-age story about a boy and his dog. Masters would follow up the huge success of Bristle Face with the sequel Sputters (1963) which follows Jase as he raises a new foxhound, Sputters, and follows Lute as he runs for sheriff, looks for a bride, and tries to provide a real home for Jase. Bristle Face was later adapted for television and aired on 26 January and 2 February 1964 as a two-part entry on Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color with Phillip Alford as Jase Landers, Brian Keith as Lute Swank, Wallace Ford as Emory Packer, Parley Baer as Sheriff Rad Tolar, George (Goober) Lindsey as Hermie Chadron, and Slim Pickins as Newt Pribble.[5][6] Tent Show also appeared on the small screen in 1964 as part of Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color.

Later life

In the mid-1960s, Masters and his son founded Joe Panther Enterprises, a non-profit mail order business supplying audio recordings of Ball's lively renderings of his stories to foster good reading habits in young children. The company also offered children the opportunity to join the Joe Panther Fan Club which included membership cards, reader's award, and a reading pledge card. The company was based in Miami, Florida, Ball's home for several years. Seeking a drier climate, he and his wife moved to Roswell, New Mexico in 1971 and in recognition of his career, Roswell declared November 2, 1976 Zachary Ball Day.[7] With a donation of a portion of his works and papers, the "Zachary Ball Children's Book Collection Room" in the James C. Kirkpatrick Library was dedicated at Central Missouri State University (now the University of Central Missouri) in Warrensburg, Missouri in April 1978. Central Missouri's collection of Ball's works are part of the Philip A. Sadler Research Collection of Literature for Children and Young Adults.[8] In the mid-1980s, Masters donated the remainder of his collection of literary papers, publications, correspondence, photographs, audio recordings, and business records created and accumulated by himself and his son between 1944 and 1983 to the University of Southern Mississippi. "The Zachary Ball Papers" in the de Grummond Children's Literature Collection were created primarily from his composition of nineteen published and unpublished works and the operation of Joe Panther Enterprises.[9] Masters died in 1987 and his son died in 1995.[3]

Selected works

Mike Fink's youth was one of Ball's many subjects.

Books

Short synopsis' of the following books were pulled from the University of Southern Mississippi's de Grummond Children's Literature Collection[10] and the University of Central Missouri's Philip A. Sadler Research Collection of Literature for Children and Young Adults[8] card catalogs.

Short stories

Ball wrote more than 100 short stories over his writing career.[11] From 1944 to 1961, he had over 70 of these stories, plus portions of such books as Pull Down To New Orleans, printed in various publications including: Hometown, Saturday Evening Post, Real Western, Junior Scholastic, Liberty, Blue Book, Frontier Stories, Modern Romances, Today’s Woman, Love Novels, Twelve Fifteen, Junior Life, Dell Western Adventure Comics, Collier's, Authors and Journalists, Junior Life, and Boys' Life.

Collected papers

References

  1. "Zachary Ball". LibraryThing. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Zachary, Ball (1958), Young Mike Fink, E. M. Hale and Company, p. 197
  3. 1 2 "Twin Oaks 2". Nmahgp.genealogyvillage.com. 2007-02-05. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  4. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074716/
  5. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0199382/
  6. "Bristle-Face - Trailer - Cast - Showtimes - NYTimes.com". Movies.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  7. "Zachary Ball Papers". Lib.usm.edu. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  8. 1 2 "Papers 1 - Zachary Ball Papers - UCM CampusGuides at James C. Kirkpatrick Library". Guides.library.ucmo.edu. 2011-06-30. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  9. Archived June 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  10. "Encore". Encore.lib.usm.edu. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  11. "Papers 4 - Zachary Ball Papers - UCM CampusGuides at James C. Kirkpatrick Library". Guides.library.ucmo.edu. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
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