
“I think it cannot be denied that for one to become a good writer, one must first become a good reader of a very wide scope of books." -- Allan W. Eckert
Allan W. Eckert was an historian, naturalist, novelist, poet, screenwriter, and playwright. The author of forty published books—plus one, The Infinite Dream, available the fall of 2011 by Jesse Stuart Foundation—he was nominated on seven separate occasions for the Pulitzer Prize in literature and, in 1985, was recipient of an honorary degree as Doctor of Humane Letters from Bowling Green State University in Ohio. In 1998 he received his second honorary doctorate, also in Humane Letters, this time from Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. In addition to his, he wrote and had published over 150 articles, essays, and short stories, as well as considerable poetry, a major outdoor drama, and screenplays for several movies.
Most noted for his historical and natural history books, Eckert's works have been translated into thirteen foreign languages around the world. A number of his books have been selections of Reader's Digest Condensed Books and several have been major book club selections. The seven of his books that have been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in literature include A Time of Terror: The Great Dayton Flood (history), Wild Season (fiction), The Silent Sky (fiction), The Frontiersmen (history), Wilderness Empire (history), The Conquerors (history), and A Sorrow in Our Heart: The Life of Tecumseh (biography).
Seven of Allan's books have been nominated for the Pulitzer

Eckert's varied writing includes over 225 performed half-hour television scripts which he wrote for the renowned Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom series and for this writing he received, in 1970, an Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in the category of Outstanding Program Achievement. He was playwright of the acclaimed Outdoor Drama entitled Tecumseh! which, in 2011, celebrated its 38th year of production at the multi-million dollar Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheater near Chillicothe, Ohio. It has been described as the finest outdoor theater production in America. Over that period, the production has been attended by upwards of three million people. For this drama and his other writings, he received from the Scioto Society, in 1987 the Second Annual Silver Arrow Humanitarian Award “for his contributions to the human spirit and knowledge as an author, novelist, playwright, naturalist, and historian.”
Scenes from the Tecumseh! Outdoor Drama in Chillicothe, Ohio
Eckert's best known historical narrative, The Frontiersmen, from which he adapted his Outdoor Drama, Tecumseh!, won the Ohioana Library Association Book-of-the-Year Award in 1968. In that same year, the Chicago-based national literary society, The Friends of American Writers, presented him with its highest award of the year for The Frontiersmen and Wild Season—the first time in that organization's forty-year history of awarding literary prizes that it could not decide between the two books by the same author and therefore awarded him first prize for both. He also received, for his book Incident at Hawk's Hill, the Newbery Honor Book Award, the highest award for juvenile literature in America. Again for Incident at Hawk's Hill, in 1976 he accepted, in person in Vienna, the Austrian Juvenile Book-of-the-Year Award—the first time this prize was ever awarded to a non-Austrian. This same book brought him Best Book of the Year Award from Claremont College in California and it was also made into a two-part television movie by Walt Disney under the title The Boy Who Talked to Badgers. A quarter-century after that book's initial publication, Eckert wrote a sequel entitled Return to Hawk's Hill, which was published in May, 1998.
His widely-acclaimed series of historical narratives entitled The Winning of America consists of six volumes, including The Frontiersmen, Wilderness Empire, The Conquerors, The Wilderness War, Gateway to Empire, and Twilight of Empire. For this series Eckert was presented the Americanism Award by the Daniel Boone Foundation in 1985, and the governor of Kentucky, late in 1987, bestowed upon him the status of honorary resident of that state and conferred upon him its highest honor, commissioning him a bona fide Kentucky Colonel. In 1995, his book That Dark and Bloody River: Chronicles of the Ohio River Valley was named runner-up for the Spur Award of the Western Writers of America. In 1997, Eckert was recipient of the Writer of the Year Award bestowed for his entire body of work by the National Popular Culture Association.
With respect to films, Eckert's book, Incident at Hawk's Hill, was adapted into a two-part television movie in 1974 by Walt Disney Productions. He wrote four screenplays: The Legend of Koo-Tan, Don Meier Productions, 1971; Wild Journey, 1972, Don Meier Production; The Kentucky Pioneers, 1972, Encyclopedia Britannica Production; and George Rogers Clark, 1973, Jerry Bean Production. In recent years Eckert's writings have included a series of children's fantasy adventures which includes two published works—The Dark Green Tunnel and The Wand.





Allan with cast members of Tecumseh! summer of 2010
An esteemed American naturalist, Eckert specialized, in addition to historical writing, in writing about natural history subjects. He had a keen interest in the natural history subjects of geology, entomology, ornithology, herpetology, paleontology, archaeology, anthropology, mineralogy, and allied fields. Among his important natural history writings are his companion volumes, The Owls of North America and The Wading Birds of North America. He also wrote a series of four volumes, published in 1987 by Harper & Row Publishers, called Earth Treasures—a guide to over 5,000 sites in the contiguous United States where the amateur collector can find excellent minerals, rocks and fossils. His major definitive work on the gemstone opal, entitled The World of Opals was published by John Wiley & Sons in October, 1997. In its review of this book, Lapidary Journal said, “A book that all opal lovers have been waiting for...this is one of the most complete books that has ever been published for any gemstone.”
Allan W. Eckert was born in Buffalo, New York, raised in the Chicago area, graduated (1948) from Leyden Community High School in Franklin Park, Illinois, and, after four years in the United States Air Force, attended the University of Dayton (Ohio) and The Ohio State University. He was founder and chairman of the board of the Lemon Bay Conservancy in Englewood, Florida, an organization which preserves wildlife and estuarial systems, and he was a life member and former trustee of the Dayton (Ohio) Museum of Natural History and, similarly, was a life member of the Mazon Creek Paleontological Society. He was a member of the American Gemcutters Society, and a consultant for La Salla Extension University in Chicago. He also designed and wrote for Writer's Digest magazine their popular correspondence courses entitled The Writer's Digest Course in Article Writing and The Writer's Digest in Short Story Writing.

A man of great literary talent, great hair, and the great outdoors - early 80s
(photograph by Mark Harmel)
In 1999, the Ohioana Library Association, in celebration of its 70th anniversary, invited all Ohioans to vote for their “all time favorite Ohio authors and their books.” Ballots were sent to all public libraries in Ohio and many Ohio newspapers also participated in the event. Eckert's book The Frontiersmen was selected as Ohioans' favorite book “About Ohio or an Ohioan.” Eckert was himself selected as Ohio's favorite author in the category of “About Ohio or an Ohioan,” and in the principal category of “Overall Favorite Ohio Writer of All Time,” the top honor resulted in a tie—shared by Toni Morrison and Eckert.
Since 1967, Eckert has been listed in Who's Who in America, Who's Who International, Who's Who in the Midwest, Who's Who in the Southeast, Who's Who in Entertainment as well as in Contemporary Authors, and Something About the Author Autobiography Series.
Allan and his wife, Joan, made their home in Corona, California.
Shortly before Allan's death, he submitted an 1,800 page manuscript for what he called a "two maybe three book project". This work is currently being edited. More information on this at a later date.
- The Writer's Digest Course in Article Writing, Writer's Digest, 1962.
- The Writer's Digest Course in Short Story Writing, Writer's Digest, 1965.
- The Owls of North America: All the Species and Subspecies Described and Illustrated, illustrations by Karl E. Karalus, Doubleday, 1974, new edition, 1975, reprinted as The Owls of North America, North of Mexico: All the Species and Subspecies Illustrated in Color and Fully Described, illustrations by Karalus, Weathervane, 1987.
- The Wading Birds of North America: All the Species and Subspecies Described and Illustrated, illustrations by Karalus, Doubleday, 1979, published as The Wading Birds of North America (North of Mexico), illustrations by Karalus, Weathervane, 1987.
- Earth Treasures: Where to Collect Minerals, Rocks, and Fossils in the United States, Volume 1: The Northeastern Quadrant, Volume 2: The Southeastern Quadrant, Volume 3: The Northwestern Quadrant, Volume 4: The Southwestern Quadrant, Perennial Library, 1987.
- The World of Opals, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997
- The Dreaming Tree, Little, Brown, 1968.
- The HAB Theory (science fiction), Little, Brown, 1976. eBook edition by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2011.
- The Scarlet Mansion, Little, Brown, 1985. eBook edition by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2011.
- Return To Hawk's Hill: A Novel, Little, Brown, 1998.
Documentary Fiction
- The Great Auk (Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection), Little, Brown, 1963. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation as The Last Great Auk, 2003.
- The Silent Sky: The Incredible Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon, Little, Brown, 1965.
- Wild Season, Little, Brown, 1967.
- Bayou Backwaters, Doubleday, 1968.
- The Crossbreed (Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection), Little, Brown, 1968.
- In Search of a Whale, Doubleday, 1970.
- The Court-Martial of Daniel Boone, Little, Brown, 1973. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2005.
- Johnny Logan: Shawnee Spy, Little, Brown, 1983. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2010.
- Opals, John Wiley and Sons (New York City), 1997.
- A Time of Terror: The Great Dayton Flood, Little, Brown, 1965.
- The Frontiersmen ("Winning of America" series), Little, Brown, 1967. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2001. eBook edition by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2011
- Wilderness Empire ("Winning of America" series), Little, Brown, 1969. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2001.
- The Conquerors ("Winning of America" series), Little, Brown, 1971. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2002.
- The Wilderness War ("Winning of America" series), Little, Brown, 1978. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2003.
- Gateway to Empire ("Winning of America" series), Little, Brown, 1982. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2004.
- Twilight of Empire: A Narrative ("Winning of America" series), Little, Brown, 1988. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2004.
- A Sorrow in Our Heart: The Life of Tecumseh, Bantam, 1992, limited edition published as Sorrow of the Heart: The Life of Tecumseh, 1992.
- That Dark and Bloody River: Chronicles of the Ohio River Valley, Bantam, 1995.
- Dark Journey, Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2009.
- The Infinite Dream, Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2011.
- The King Snake (nature novel), Little, Brown, 1968.
- Blue Jacket: War Chief of the Shawnees, Little, Brown, 1969. Reprinted by Jesse Stuart Foundation, 2004.
- Incident at Hawk's Hill (novel; Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection), Little, Brown, 1971.
- Savage Journey (novel), Little, Brown, 1979.
- Song of the Wild (novel), Little, Brown, 1980.
- Whattizzit? Nature Pun Quizzes, Landfall Press, 1981.
- The Dark Green Tunnel ("Mesmerian Annals" series), Little, Brown, 1984.
- The Wand: The Return to Mesmeria, ("Mesmerian Annals" series), Little, Brown, 1985.
- Tecumseh! (play), Little, Brown, 1974. http://www.tecumsehdrama.com/
- Author of more than 200 television scripts for Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom (1963 – 1988). http://www.wildkingdom.com
- Author of screenplays including The Legend of Koo-Tan, 1971, Wild Journey, 1972, The Kentucky Pioneers, 1972, and George Rodgers Clark, 1973.
- Contributor of more than 200 articles to periodicals.




Subscribe to RSS Feed
Follow us on: