Terry C. Johnston

Terry C. Johnston (1 January 1947-25 March 2001) was an American Western fiction author who wrote over 30 novels and had more than 10 million books in print.

He was born in Arkansas City, Kansas. His parents were a junior college president and a teacher. He gained a BA from Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma. As a young man, he traveled and worked various jobs, all the while becoming a student of the Old West. Johnston published his first novel, Carry the Wind, in 1982 after it had been rejected by 29 publishers; it won the Western Writers of America's Medicine Pipe Bearer's Award. Johnston wrote his first novel while he worked as a lease manager for Northwest Auto in Thornton, Colorado, using the company's word processor after work to write, sometimes working through the night. He settled near Billings, Montana.

Johnston is best known for a series of nine historical novels spanning the Rocky Mountain Fur Trade era and its eventual demise told through the eyes of the protagonist, Titus "Scratch" Bass. He also wrote a series of novels about the "Indian wars" of the West, the Plainsmen Series, following the U.S. Army struggle with the Native American Indians with protagonist Seamus Donegan. Another series of books was based on a possibly true story of a relationship General Custer had with a Cheyenne girl.

Johnston said to his wife that he felt when he killed off Scratch or when Scratch died he wouldn't last too long afterwards, and he died of colon cancer on March 25, 2001, only a month after being diagnosed. In his memory The Terry C. Johnston Memorial Scholarship Fund was established at Montana State University – Billings, as well as donations were made to the Custer Battlefield Preservation Committee, and the National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance.

He was married three times. His first wife was Doris (Howard) with whom he had one son (Joshua); they divorced in 1982. Johnston's second wife was Rhonda (Hill) Stacy with whom he had one son (Noah) and one daughter (Erinn). His third wife was Vanette.

Read more about Terry C. Johnston:  Published Work

Famous quotes containing the word terry:

    If it is the mark of the artist to love art before everything, to renounce everything for its sake, to think all the sweet human things of life well lost if only he may attain something, do some good, great work—then I was never an artist.
    —Ellen Terry (1847–1928)