Early fiction MacDonald's first published short story, "G-Robot", appeared in the July 1936
Double Action Gang magazine. Following his 1945 discharge from the army, MacDonald spent four months writing short stories, generating some 800,000 words and losing while typing 14 hours a day, seven days a week. He received hundreds of rejection slips, but "Cash on the Coffin!" appeared in the May 1946
pulp magazine Detective Tales. Selections from MacDonald's early magazine fiction, somewhat revised, were later republished in two collections,
The Good Old Stuff (1982) and
More Good Old Stuff (1984), Starting with
The Brass Cupcake in 1950, MacDonald wrote more than forty standalone crime thrillers and domestic dramas, most published as paperback originals and many of them set in Florida. Among them was
The Executioners (1957), which was filmed twice as
Cape Fear and later republished under that title. MacDonald also wrote three science fiction novels, including
The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything (1962), which was filmed for television. After introducing his series character Travis McGee in 1964, MacDonald concentrated mostly on that series, although he did publish four additional standalone novels.
Travis McGee In 1964, MacDonald published
The Deep Blue Good-by, the first of 21 novels starring
Travis McGee, a self-described "salvage consultant" who recovers stolen property for a fee of 50 percent, and who narrates his adventures in the first person. McGee originally was to be called Dallas McGee, but MacDonald dropped that name after the
Kennedy assassination, borrowing instead the name of
Travis Air Force Base. The McGee adventures, each of which has a color in the title, mostly play out in Florida (where McGee lives a hedonistic bachelor life on a houseboat), the Caribbean, or Mexico, and many of them feature his friend and sidekick Dr. Meyer ("Just 'Meyer', please") Meyer, a renowned economist who helps Travis deconstruct elaborate swindles and cases of business corruption. ==Death==