B.M. Bower

American author and screenwriter
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Also known as: Bertha Muzzy, Bertha Muzzy Sinclair Bower
Quick Facts
In full:
Bertha Muzzy Sinclair Bower
Born:
November 15, 1871, Cleveland, Minnesota, U.S.
Died:
July 23, 1940, Los Angeles, California (aged 68)

B.M. Bower (born November 15, 1871, Cleveland, Minnesota, U.S.—died July 23, 1940, Los Angeles, California) was an American author and screenwriter known for her stories set in the American West.

She was born Bertha Muzzy. She moved as a small child with her family from Minnesota to Montana, where she gained the firsthand experience of ranch life that was central to her novels and screenplays. She married Clayton J. Bower at age 18 and became a schoolteacher as well as the mother of three children. She divorced him in 1905 and married Bertrand W. Sinclair the following year. The union lasted six years. She married her third husband, Robert Ellsworth Cowan, in 1920.

Her first published work appeared in the pulp publication The Popular Magazine in 1904, and in 1906 she published her first novel, Chip, of the Flying U, about the lives of cowboy Chip Bennett and his group of hands at the Flying U ranch. She revisited the characters in several sequels, including The Happy Family (1910) and Flying U Ranch (1914). These novels achieved significant popularity in the United States, becoming standards for many Americans who knew little of life in the West.

Bower wrote more than 60 books in her 40-year career. Her first collection of short stories, The Lonesome Trail, appeared in 1909. Other novels include Lonesome Land (1912), The Heritage of the Sioux (1916), Cabin Fever (1918), and The Five Furies of Leaning Ladder (1936). Bower converted several of her novels into screenplays, and her involvement with Hollywood led to a fascination with the film industry that found its way into her later novels. More than 10 films based on her works were produced.

Bower’s writing, intended for a commercial audience eager to learn about the adventures of cowboys and ranchers, was not always praised by critics, who viewed the western genre as sensationalist or melodramatic. Her work was unusual for its time, however, in featuring female characters that were as developed as their male counterparts.

Michelle Bean