For the 1921 film adaptation see The Jucklins (film)
The Jucklins | |
Author: | Opie Read |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Laird & Lee (Chicago) |
Release Date: | January 28, 1896 |
Media Type: | Print (paperback) |
Pages: | 291[1] |
The Jucklins is an 1896 novel by Opie Read. It was a bestselling book in the United States (Read asserted that over one million copies were sold[2]), though it never appeared on the best-sellers list in The Bookman since its early and primary sales were of cheap paperback copies sold on trains and at newsstands.[3] [4]
The story is set in the backwoods of North Carolina. Teacher Bill Hawes lives with the Jucklins, a local farming family, including father Lim Jucklin, daughter Guinea, and son Alf.[5] [6]
Read reported that he sold the book for $700 to publisher Laird & Lee. He needed the cash to pay off a poker debt.[7] A sequel of sorts, Old Lim Jucklin was released in 1905, and consists of a "collection of random observations and humors in the cracker-box philosopher manner."[7]
The novel was also adapted for the stage, and a version adapted by Daniel Hart debuted in Louisville, Kentucky in January 1897, produced by actor Stuart Robson.[8] This version did not get rave reviews,[9] and a wholly rewritten play by playwright Augustus Thomas (also produced by Robson) appeared in December of the same year.[10] [11]
A silent film version of the novel directed by George Melford, and starring Winter Hall, Mabel Julienne Scott, and Monte Blue was released in 1921.