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WILLIAM WHARTON (European Pressphoto Agency) |
William Wharton, painter gained fame as novelist; 82
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LOS ANGELES - William Wharton, an Expressionist painter who launched a new career as a novelist in his 50s and won an American Book Award for his first novel, "Birdy," died Wednesday. He was 82.
Mr. Wharton, who had been in failing health for some time, died at Scripps Memorial Hospital in Encinitas, Calif., said his wife of 58 years, Rosemary.
Mr. Wharton, a Philadelphia native, was 53 and making his living as an artist in Paris under his birth name, Albert du Aime, when "Birdy" was published by Knopf in 1979.
"Birdy" - a highly original novel that opens in an Army hospital ward at the end of World War II where a young soldier who has been emotionally shattered by the horrors of combat and retreated so much into the safer world of the birds he raised as a youth that he actually believes he is a bird - won the American Book Award for first novel and was a Pulitzer Prize runner-up for fiction.
"Only the most rigorous imagination can make a story of this sort work for a reader who is generally indifferent to birds," wrote Newsweek magazine reviewer Peter S. Prescott. "Wharton has just such an imagination."
Rosalie Siegel, Mr. Wharton's agent since she sold "Birdy" to Knopf, said that when she read the manuscript, "I thought it was an amazing novel with a very original voice. It just swept all of New York publishing off its feet initially and was a sensation upon publication."
Mr. Wharton was known for closely guarding his privacy, which is why he chose to use a pseudonym for his writing. (William Wharton is derived from his middle name and his mother's maiden name.)
"My private life means a lot to me, and one of the best ways I could think of to protect [it] is to write under a pseudonym," he told the Chicago Sun-Times in 1992. Or, as he told the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel in 1995: "In France, I'm just a crazy painter who lives on a boat, but I didn't want to become an American celebrity, even a small literary one."
Mr. Wharton, who has said that fantasy and intimacy were the two main aims of his writing, told the London Times in 1986 that, "One of the reasons I don't want to live the life of a writer is I don't want writers' problems.
"Not thinking of myself as a writer gives me the freedom to be one. I'm not a wordsmith. I just basically look into my head and see the image and look for words."
Mr. Wharton was born in Philadelphia, into what he later told London's Guardian newspaper was "a very poor, hard-working, uneducated Catholic family."
Mr. Wharton, who raised as many as 250 canaries while growing up, volunteered for the Army at 17 during World War II, and while serving in the 87th Infantry Division was severely wounded during the Battle of the Bulge.
After the war, he earned a degree in art from the University of California at Los Angeles, where he received a doctorate in psychology in 1960. He taught art in the Los Angeles city schools for 11 years before packing up and moving his family to Europe in 1960.
"When our oldest [child] got into the beginning of the television age, we decided we didn't want our children growing up like that," he said in a 1979 interview for the Biography Resource Center. "We felt a strong desire to get out of the pressure from the American competitive-comparative-consumer society."
After moving around Spain, Italy, Germany, and France, they settled in Paris in 1968, dividing their time between an apartment in the city and a houseboat on the Seine in Port Marly about 10 miles away.
He wrote about it in his 1996 book "Houseboat on the Seine." Although he began writing novels in 1950 and wrote several over the years, he never attempted to get them published. It wasn't until 1977 when a friend, urging him to submit his latest, "Birdy," introduced him to Siegel.
Mr. Wharton continued to paint after achieving critical and financial success as an author.
He shared with readers the tragic 1988 death of his daughter, Kate, and her husband and two young children in a 23-car highway crash in Oregon caused by heavy smoke from a grass-seed burning on a nearby farm.
His book "Ever After: A Father's True Story" recounts his daughter's life and death and his efforts to seek redress for his daughter and her family's deaths in court.
In addition to his wife, Mr. Wharton leaves his sons, Matt and William du Aime; his daughter, Camille du Aime Russell; five grandchildren; and one great-grandson.![]()



