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William C. Anderson Papers, 1954-2003

Overview of the Collection

Title
William C. Anderson Papers
Dates
1954-2003 (inclusive)
Quantity
7.5 linear feet, (17 boxes)
Collection Number
MSS 218
Summary
Correspondence, contracts, clippings, fan mail, photos, and other papers, relating to chiefly to William C. Anderson's books and their film adaptations; together personal correspondence, typescripts of other writings, magazine columns, and speeches. Books represented include Bat-21, the story of Lt. Col. Iceal (Gene) Hambleton, a downed American pilot in the Vietnam War. Magazine columns relate chiefly to retirement travel in motor homes. Correspondents include the William Morris Agency and Gene Hambleton.
Repository
Boise State University Library, Special Collections and Archives
Special Collections and Archives
1910 University Drive
Boise ID
83725
Telephone: 2084263990
archives@boisestate.edu
Access Restrictions

Collection is available for research.

Languages
English
Sponsor
Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities
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Biographical Note

William C. Anderson, author and Air Force officer, was born May 7, 1920, in La Junta Colorado. Shortly after his birth, his father Robert and mother Fannie Anderson moved to Boise, Idaho. William, also known as Andy, grew up in Boise. He graduated from Boise High School in 1938. After high school William attended Boise Junior College and Fort Hays College in Kansas. He put his education on hold and joined the Army Air Corps shortly after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.

Anderson chose a career as an Air Force Officer. He flew in the Berlin Airlift, piloted air-evacuation aircraft during the Korean War, and commanded a weather reconnaissance squadron during the Eniwetok H-bomb tests. He also wrote while in the Air Force, editing Air Force publications and beginning work on his first books. He ended his military career involved in the Cuban Missile Crisis and working in the Pentagon. He retired from the Air Force in 1964 and eventually moved back to his hometown of Boise.

Love for writing kept him busy in his retirement. His 20 books were influenced by his experience in the military and his natural wit and humor. Anderson "hit it big" with his book Bat-21, the true story of the rescue of a downed American Air Force officer in Vietnam. In 1988 he wrote the screenplay for the movie version, starring Danny Glover and Gene Hackman. This movie was a huge success and the highlight of Anderson's career. Anderson also wrote a monthly column for Motor Home magazine. This was a humorous column about Anderson's journeys with his wife on the road.

Anderson married Dortha Power in 1948. William and Dortha were the parents of three children: Ann, Scott, and Holly.

Anderson died of natural causes at the age of 83 in Fairfield, California, on May 16, 2003.

Sources:

Biographical information found within the collection

Obituary, Idaho Statesman, May 21, 2003

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Content Description

The William C. Anderson papers consist chiefly of correspondence, contracts, business papers, clippings, fan mail, photos, and other papers, relating to his books and writing career. Virtually every aspect of book writing, from the creative impulses through business negotiations (contracts, foreign editions, film adaptations) and promotional tours are documented here. There is a great deal of paperwork relating to two books: Bat-21, the story of the rescue of a downed American fighter pilot during the Vietnam War (made into a movie starring Gene Hackman and Danny Glover), and another work of nonfiction, Lady Bluebeard, about Lyda Southard, a serial husband killer in Idaho. Most of Anderson's other books, also represented by papers in the collection, are in the humorous vein, as are the magazine columns he wrote about retirement travel in a motor home. Anderson corresponded widely; that correspondence can be found throughout the collection. Special Collections also holds foreign language editions of Bat-21 in Japanese, French, and Dutch.

A chronological list of William C. Anderson's published books follows:

Five, Four, Three, Two, One--Pfft (1960)

Penelope (1963)

Adam M-1: a novel (1964)

Pandemonium on the Potomac: a novel (1966)

The Gooney Bird: a novel (1968)

The Two-ton Albatross, or Across a Transcontinental Highway in a Travel Trailer...(1969)

The Apoplectic Palm Tree: a novel (1969)

Roll up the Wallpaper, We're Moving (1970)

Hurricane Hunters: a novel (1972)

The Headstrong Houseboat (1972)

The Great Bicycle Expedition: Freewheeling through Europe...(1973)

Different Spokes for Different Folks (1973)

Penelope, the Damp Detective (1974)

When the Offspring Have Sprung (1978)

Home Sweet Home Has Wheels, or, Please Don't Tailgate the Real Estate (1979)

BAT-21 (1980)

Bomber Crew 369 (1986)

Taming Mighty Alaska: an RV Odyssey (1990)

Lady Bluebeard (1994)

How to Survive Hospital Care, or "Why They Keep Bedpans in the Freezer" (1996)

Forms part of the Idaho Writers Archive.

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Use of the Collection

Preferred Citation

[item description], William C. Anderson Papers, Box [number] Folder [number], Boise State University Special Collections and Archives.

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Administrative Information

Arrangement

The collection is arranged in six series: 1. Biographical and personal papers; 2. Correspondence; 3. Books; 4. Motor Home column; 5. Other writings; and 6. Photos.

Acquisition Information

Gift of the Anderson family, 2003.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top