(lower right),
Deems Taylor (upper left), and
Westbrook Pegler (lower left), shown here at the home of
Lowell Thomas at
Quaker Lake,
Pawling, New York (1938) Bye's writers included
Frank Buck,
Eleanor Roosevelt,
Charles A. Lindbergh,
Alexander Woollcott,
Rebecca West,
Westbrook Pegler,
John Erskine,
Rose Wilder Lane,
Laura Ingalls Wilder,
Richard and Frances Lockridge (who wrote the
Mr. and Mrs. North mystery novels),
Alfred E. Smith,
Franklin P. Adams,
Frederick Hazlitt Brennan,
Wilbur Daniel Steele,
Heywood Broun,
Deems Taylor,
Donald C. Peattie and General of the Armies
John J. Pershing. Bye liked to describe himself as "guide, philosopher and wet nurse." On one occasion, he commented: "We arrange marriages and divorces for them and rush obstetricians to their doorsteps when they're having babies. The only time I ever failed was when a client came to me with a valuable dog who refused to have pups. I couldn't do a thing." Bye had a particular fondness for newspaper reporters, having been one himself. "The newspaper lads are all old cronies," he once remarked. He was also close to President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and encouraged
Eleanor Roosevelt to write a syndicated column,
My Day. Bye ranked the Abbe children among his most amusing clients.
Patience Abbe, 12 years old; Richard, 10, and Johnny, 8, were the children of
Jim Abbe, an itinerant photographer, and his wife, the former Polly Platt, once a
Ziegfeld girl. Prodded by their mother, the children dictated their memoirs, which Bye sold as
Around the World in Eleven Years. According to the Abbe family,
Patience Abbe was the primary author. The book was a surprise hit. In 1954, Bye arranged the sale to Hollywood of Lindbergh's best-selling autobiography,
The Spirit of St. Louis, for more than $1,000,000. But Bye was initially unenthusiastic about
Laura Ingalls Wilder, commenting that the manuscript of her unpublished memoir,
Pioneer Girl, lacked drama. Wilder's daughter,
Rose Wilder Lane, herself a client of Bye's, ultimately convinced him to take on her mother's series of children's novels, drawn from the earlier memoir, which ultimately became some of the agency's most profitable titles. Another agency, James Brown Associates, took over George T. Bye & Co in 1949. Bye died in 1957. ==References==