PRO CONNECT
Dale M. Pollock, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, received a BA in Anthropology from Brandeis University in 1972 and a MS in Communications from San Jose State University. In 1977, he became the head film critic for Daily Variety until he was hired by the Los Angeles Times to be their chief entertainment correspondent. He was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in the early 1980s and wrote Skywalking: The Life and Films of George Lucas in 1983, which has sold more than 150,000 copies and remains in print. In 1985, Pollock joined David Geffen’s company as a development executive, where he discovered the scripts for Beetlejuice, The Burbs and Universal Soldier. He joined A&M Films as vice president in charge of production, and was named president in 1990, producing such films as The Beast, The Mighty Quinn, A Midnight Clear and Mrs. Winterbourne. Pollock ran his own film company Peak Productions for 10 years, producing the box office hit Set It Off. He co-founded the producing program at the American Film Institute in 1995. In 1999 he became Dean of the School of Filmmaking at the (then) North Carolina School of the Arts, stepping down in 2006 to become Professor of Cinema Studies. He was awarded Emeritus status in 2019 and served as Interim Dean for nine months in 2021. Pollock was awarded an Endowed Professorship in Film in his name at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts School of Filmmaking in 2014 and is the 2016 recipient of the UNC Board of Governors Award for Teaching Excellence. He also received the 2020 Arts Council of Winston Salem’s Annual Award, its highest honor, and was inducted into the Shaker Heights Hall of Fame in 2022. Pollock was recently requested to return and teach a final semester in the UNCSA School of Filmmaking, “The Short Film.” Pollock's first work of fiction, CHOPPED: A NOVEL, was published in March 2023, and he is now at work on his second novel, set in Winston Salem, North Carolina, in 1918.
“An immersive and meticulous rendering of a bygone era and a trial that scandalized Boston.”
– Kirkus Reviews
In Pollock’s historical novel, the murder of Boston’s richest man in the 19th century leads to a celebrated trial.
On Nov. 23, 1849, George Parkman was witnessed entering Harvard Medical College at 1:45 p.m. There was no proof that he ever exited the building. Parkman, a doctor who was also engaged in real estate investment and moneylending, was not known for “benevolence or generosity.” One of his immigrant tenants complains, “Tha money go out, but nun ever come back, Docter. The roofs, they still leak. The wind, she still blows right inna where the babes sleep, Docter. Ye be killin’ tha little babes!” Parkman is known as the “Tiger Creditor,” as he’s always in ferocious pursuit of those who fail repayment. One of these was Professor John White Webster, who was $2,400 in debt to Parkman. By all accounts, Webster was “the meekest of men.” So, it was quite a shock that body parts recovered in Webster’s vault are determined to have belonged to Parkman, “a fearsome man in any circumstances.” Who would dare lift a hand to one of the wealthiest and most powerful men in the city, let alone cut him into pieces? Could Webster be “the most cool-headed killer imaginable?” One man determined to find out is Dr. James Winchell Stone, who uses phonography to record the minutiae of the trial. The author has one degree of separation from the case: His wife, Susie O’Keefe Pollock, is the great-great-granddaughter of Stone. Reflecting almost two decades’ worth of research and writing, this lively historical novel is built on a copy of the actual trial transcript passed on to Pollock by her mother. An invented romance between Stone and a fictional Irishwoman named Ellen O’Keefe expands the scope of the courtroom drama to touch on issues of immigration and class. While the whodunnit is rather elementary, there is a “now you know the rest of the story” twist that does this sensational trial justice.
An immersive and meticulous rendering of a bygone era and a trial that scandalized Boston.
Pub Date: March 6, 2023
ISBN: 9798218117023
Page count: 338pp
Publisher: Shadowbrook Publishing
Review Posted Online: Nov. 8, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2024
Shaker Heights Alumni Hall of Fame, 2022
Annual Artist of the Year, The Arts Council of Winston Salem and Forsyth County, 2020
Emeritus faculty status, School of Filmmaking, UNCSA, 2019
Visionary Award, RiverRun International Film Festival, 2018
Excellence in Teaching Award, UNCSA School of Filmmaking, 2016
Winner, Best Picture, "The Beast" Cleveland Film Festival, 1988
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