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Clarence Cooper, Jr. : ウィキペディア英語版 | Clarence Cooper, Jr.
Clarence L. Cooper Jr. (1934 – 1978) was an American author. ==Biography== Clarence Cooper Jr. wrote seven crime novels that describe life in Black America, in the underworld of drugs and violence and in jail (''The Farm''). Cooper worked as an editor for ''The Chicago Messenger'' around 1955. He was said to have started taking heroin at this time.〔(Clarence Cooper Jnr ) profile, Canongate Press〕 His first book, ''The Scene'', was a success with the critics. It had been published by serious Random House, but his other three books were published by Regency, a pure paperback publisher, while Cooper was in prison in Detroit: ''Weed'' (1961), ''The Dark Messenger'' (1962) and ''Yet Princes Follow'' together with ''Not We Many'', as ''Black: Two Short Novels'' (1962). Harlan Ellison was his editor.〔(''el'' 11, vol. 2, no. 6, December 2003 the ''regency'' covers )〕 His last book, ''The Farm'', plays at the Lexington prison for drug addicts, once called U.S. Narcotics Farm. Cooper's addiction and a growing alienation from those around him, perhaps driven by the hostile response to his fiction, all contributed to his early destitute death.
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