After the war Benchley worked for the weekly magazine
Newsweek as an assistant drama editor. Harcourt, Brace published Benchley's first book in 1950,
Side Street, a novel featuring "hilarious activities of two New York City families living in the East Sixties"—that is, living on the
East Side of Manhattan, near the 60th Street. He wrote a biography of his father Robert that McGraw-Hill published in 1955. In 1960 Harper & Row published his second novel,
Sail A Crooked Ship, and Random House his first children's book, retold from
Sindbad the Sailor with illustrations by Tom O'Sullivan. Benchley was the respected author of much
children's fiction that provides readers an experience of certain animal species, historical settings, and so on (
Oscar Otter,
Sam The Minuteman, etc.). He presented diverse locales and topics: for instance,
Bright Candles recounts the experiences of a 16-year-old Danish boy during the
German occupation of Denmark in World War II;
Small Wolf features a
Native American boy who meets white men on the
island of Manhattan and learns that their ideas about land are different from those of his own people.
Sail A Crooked Ship was
adapted as a comedy
feature movie of the same name by Columbia Pictures in 1961. His 1961 novel
The Off-Islanders was made into comedy feature
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming by director/producer
Norman Jewison in 1965.
The Visitors (1965) was adapted as a horror/comedy feature
The Spirit Is Willing by Paramount Pictures in 1967. In October 1975, ABC showed the made-for-television drama
Sweet Hostage, based on Benchley's 1968 novel
Welcome To Xanadu. Benchley was a friend of the actor
Humphrey Bogart and wrote a biography of Bogart published in 1975. ==Personal life==