Walter R. Brooks (1886–1958)
Author of Freddy the Detective
About the Author
Walter R. Brooks was born on January 9, 1886 in Rome, New York. He attended the Mohegan Lake Military Academy from 1902 to 1904 and the University of Rochester from 1904 to 1906. In 1906 he went to New York City to study homeopathic medicine at the Homeopathic Medical College and Flower Hospital. show more He dropped out of medical school at the end of 1908. He found employment with an advertising agency, and then temporarily retired in 1911 after receiving a considerable inheritance. In 1917, he went to work for the American Red Cross and later did editorial work for several magazines, including The New Yorker. In 1915, his first work, a sonnet titled Haunted, was published in the Century magazine. He is best remembered for his short stories and children's books. His first short story for adults, Harden's Chance, appeared in the Forum magazine for December 1915. Altogether he published more than 180 stories. His short story, Ed Signs the Pledge, about a talking horse was the basis for the 1960s television comedy series Mister Ed. He published one novel for adults, Ernestine Takes Over and a guidebook, New York: An Intimate Guide. The first Freddy the Pig book, To and Again, was published in 1927. He wrote 25 more books wrote about Freddy the Pig and his friends. He died on August 17, 1958. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Walter R. Brooks
Ernestine Takes Over 2 copies
Freddy the Pig 2 copies
Bird in the Bush 1 copy
Freddy and the Pied Piper 1 copy
Monster in Horse’s Clothing 1 copy
Do Ye Ken Wilbur Pope? 1 copy
Ed Gets a Mother Complex 1 copy
Mr. Pope Rides Again 1 copy
New York : an intimate guide 1 copy
Dr. Atwood and Mr. Ed 1 copy
Ed Holds a Seance 1 copy
Just a Song at Twilight 1 copy
Ed Shoots it Out 1 copy
Ed Has His Mind Improved 1 copy
Mr. Pope’s Thoroughbred 1 copy
The Talking Horse 1 copy
Plain Horse Sense 1 copy
Associated Works
In the Stacks: Short Stories about Libraries and Librarians (2002) — Contributor — 546 copies, 13 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Brooks, Walter R.
- Legal name
- Brooks, Walter Rollin
- Birthdate
- 1886-01-09
- Date of death
- 1958-08-17
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Rochester
- Occupations
- publicist
editor
author - Agent
- Charles Schlessiger (Brandt & Hochman Literary Agency)
- Short biography
- Walter R. Brooks was born in Rome, New York, on January 9, 1886. His mother, Fanny Stevens Brooks, was the daughter of Samuel Barron Stevens, a banker and two-time mayor of Rome. His father, William Walter Brooks, was the son of Dr. Walter Rollin Brooks, an eminent Baptist clergyman and a member of the faculty of Madison University in Hamilton, NY. The university was then a Baptist theological seminary, though today - re-named - it is Colgate University.
When Walter was four, his father - who worked as a music teacher - died. Eleven years later, his mother died, as well. Walter was sent to the Mohegan Lake Military Academy in Peekskill, NY, for two years (1902-04). In 1904 he went to live with his older sister, Elsie and her husband, Dr. Willliam Perrin, a distinguished homeopathic doctor and professor at the University of Rochester, where Walter was a student from 1904-1906.
In 1906 he went to New York City to study homeopathic medicine at the Homeopathic Medical College and Flower Hospital. He dropped out of medical school at the end of 1908 and returned to Rochester where, on January 22, 1909, he married Anne Shephard. From 1910-1911 Walter worked for the Frank Du Noyer Advertising Agency in Utica.
In 1911 Walter's two maiden aunts, Rhoda and Lucy, died within a month of each other and, apparently, Walter came into a considerable amount of money. At least he later wrote that, for some reason, he "retired" about that time. In 1915 his first work - a sonnet titled "Haunted" - was published in the Century magazine.
In 1917 he went to work for the American Red Cross as a publicist. He worked for the Red Cross until 1927, moving, in 1919, to New York City.
The first Freddy book, To and Again, was published in 1927. From 1928-1932 Walter worked as a book review editor and columnist for The Outlook and Independent magazine, where he was one of the first reviewers to discover the work of Dashielle Hammett. From 1932-33 Walter worked for the New Yorker, writing "Talk of the Town" pieces. From 1933-1937 he was a Contributing Editor to Fiction Parade magazine and from 1938-1940 held a similar position with Scribner's Commentator. From 1940 until the end of his life in 1958, Walter gave up editorial work and devoted full time to Freddy and the writing of his adult short stories.
In 1937 Walter and Anne discovered Roxbury. They were originally attracted to the village by the presence of an art school at the Burro Ranch (Anne was an artist, who specialized in portraits). Within a year or so, Walter had leased property from a nearby farmer and built the cabin on a hill above Roxbury where he and Anne summered until 1948 when they moved to Roxbury year-round, buying the house on Main Street that the Friends of Freddy make a pilgrimage to after conventions.
Anne died in 1952 and, two months later, Walter married Dorothy Collins. Walter died on August 17, 1958.
Walter's first short story for adults, "Harden's Chance," appeared in the Forum magazine for December 1915. From then until 1934 he published thirty-three more. Starting in September 1934, he began selling stories to Esquire and hit his stride as a short story writer. Altogether he published more than 180 stories, 25 of which starred Ed, the talking horse.
Walter published one novel for adults, Ernestine Takes Over (Morrow 1935) and a guidebook, New York: An Intimate Guide (Knopf 1931). A second novel, The Romantic Liars, was serialized in Country Gentleman magazine in 1925 but was never published in hardcover. - Cause of death
- heart attack
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Rome, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- Rome, New York, USA
New York, New York, USA
Roxbury, New York, USA - Place of death
- Roxbury, New York, USA
- Burial location
- Hamilton, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- New York, USA
Members
Reviews
I devoured Freddy the Pig books in elementary school. I can still remember where these books sat on the shelves at West—on the back wall, middle shelves. In fact, I credit my love of Freddy for why I read Animal Farm around 6th grade—I definitely did not get the allegory or even understand fascism, but I did understand talking animals and I loved them. Mr Ed was one of my favorite TV shows as a kid; I watched it on Nick at Nite when I was little and my mom would let me stay up late. So show more Walter Brooks played a big role in my childhood (he created Mr Ed AND Freddy).
When we were at the peacock library a few weeks ago, books with "Freddy" on the spine caught my eye and it was my beloved Freddy, so I checked a couple out. After reading Enormous Wings and Pony Confidential, two books with predominantly orange covers, I joked that I was only going to read books with orange covers in April because it is my favorite color and April is my birth month. And this Freddy book with an orange cover just happened to be sitting on my shelf so it was chosen!
This book is Animal Farm for Kids complete with fascist takeover of the farm by woodpeckers from DC. They move animals onto the farm just for their vote, they takeover the bank by tricking Freddy, and they march on neighboring farms to control those animals, too. But, of course, Freddy is able to stop them with tricks of his own including dressing up as an old woman with an Irish brogue and colluding with the (human) bank President.
A silly, funny series with talking animals fun for all ages (and probably the reason I talk to every animal expecting a response). show less
When we were at the peacock library a few weeks ago, books with "Freddy" on the spine caught my eye and it was my beloved Freddy, so I checked a couple out. After reading Enormous Wings and Pony Confidential, two books with predominantly orange covers, I joked that I was only going to read books with orange covers in April because it is my favorite color and April is my birth month. And this Freddy book with an orange cover just happened to be sitting on my shelf so it was chosen!
This book is Animal Farm for Kids complete with fascist takeover of the farm by woodpeckers from DC. They move animals onto the farm just for their vote, they takeover the bank by tricking Freddy, and they march on neighboring farms to control those animals, too. But, of course, Freddy is able to stop them with tricks of his own including dressing up as an old woman with an Irish brogue and colluding with the (human) bank President.
A silly, funny series with talking animals fun for all ages (and probably the reason I talk to every animal expecting a response). show less
Very funny. Love all the satire, and don't think it goes over children's heads, as I'm sure this series (what few books that I could find) was a primer for me to appreciate [b:Animal Farm|529943|Animal Farm|George Orwell|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1331660581s/529943.jpg|2207778]. I love how there are no super-villains... lots of bad guys, but they all have bits of 'humanity' in their characters. And the adventure is interesting, too, including the dramatic courtroom scene.
I really show more wish these were still read, and therefore still available... try them with your child and let me know if there's a chance that we could revive interest in them! show less
I really show more wish these were still read, and therefore still available... try them with your child and let me know if there's a chance that we could revive interest in them! show less
Freddy the Pig is positively worn out. Not only is he President of the First Animal Bank, but he's editor of the animals' newspaper, "The Bean Home News," Luckily for Freddy, his friend Jinx the cat and his cousin Weedly convince him to take a position as caretaker of the wealthy Mr. Camphor's estate on the lake. But when odd things start happening, and a couple of old enemies show up in town, Freddy has to take a break from his new job and put his detective skills to work!
This one's extra interesting. More dramatic, and more thoughtful. It's not Freddy or the animals in trouble from humans so much, as it is animal vs. animal and human vs. human. I like the exploration of the character of Mrs. Winch, who left no-good husband. I like the project of analyzing the truth of proverbs. Also I appreciate that Charles got a chance to be helpful using his oratory skills. These are just full of little details like that, including a note that Uncle Wesley, the duck, got show more seasick on a large lake.... show less
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- Works
- 64
- Also by
- 13
- Members
- 4,801
- Popularity
- #5,231
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 88
- ISBNs
- 287
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- Favorited
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