George Malcolm-Smith (1901โ1984) was an American novelist and jazz musicologist. A 1925 graduate of Trinity College, he hosted a jazz radio program on WTIC-FM in Hartford, Connecticut for many years.
He wrote eight humorous novels, most with "salty pictures by Carl Rose." His first novel was adapted into a Broadway musical in 1945 entitled Are You With It?. The musical was in turn adapted into a 1948 film.
He collected a large number of items related to jazz, which were given to the Watkinson Library at Trinity College after his death as dictated in his will.[1]
Novels
- Slightly Perfect (1941)
- The Grass is Always Greener (1947)
- The Square Peg (1952) [also released as Mugs, Molls and Dr. Harvey in Graphic paperback #104 (1955)]
- The Trouble With Fidelity (1957)
- If a Body Meet a Body (1959)
- The Lady Finger (1962)
- Come Out, Come Out (1965)
- Dividend of Death (1966).[2]
References
- โ "Biography of George Malcolm-Smith at Trinity College" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2009-04-04.
- โ George-Malcolm-Smith at openlibrary.org
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