Online FavoritesSpecial IssuesPhoto Galleries |
Unsolved Mysteries Mystery Writer A lost legendwas it suicide or murder? By Tim Sohn
To merely die would have been average. But to disappear completely and assure one's immortality as a literary mystery betrays a black geniusand has Ambrose Bierce's fingerprints all over it. When the noted author vanished in late 1913 at the age of 71, he left behind a remarkable body of work that ranged from caustic journalism to dark fiction to his incomparable Devil's Dictionary, a compendium of acerbic redefinitions of familiar words. An iconoclast to the end, Bierce was not the type to go gently into a feeble-minded dotage. After closing out his affairs, he told reporters that his plan was to travel south, into the teeth of the Mexican revolution, and hinted that he might attach himself to Pancho Villa's forces.
His final letter, dated December 26, 1913, but later destroyed, suggested that he was in the city of Chihuahua and planning to depart soon for the battle at Ojinaga. Many have concluded that he died in the chaos of that battle or another. Other theories have him executed on orders from Villa or killed by rogue soldiers or, as he predicted, a firing squad. (In the film Old Gringo, based on a novel by Carlos Fuentes, Bierce, as played by Gregory Peck, is shot after arousing the ire of a Mexican general.) Half a dozen cities and towns, from Sierra Mojada, Mexico, to Marfa, Texas, have been posited as his final resting place, and his disappearance instigated State Department and U.S. Army investigations. "We simply don't know what happened," says Craig Warren, a professor of English at Penn StateErie and editor of the university's Ambrose Bierce Project Web site. "I think it's likely that he died of wounds or illness in Mexico, but given the lack of evidence, it seems unwise to try to push for conclusions." Of course, not everyone has taken such a noncommittal view. "I think Mexico was clearly a red herring, an elaborate feint," says Amherst, New Yorkbased literary investigator Joe Nickell, who has found evidence supporting the belief of Bierce's friend and publisher Walter Neale that, rather than crossing into Mexico, Bierce merely used it as a smoke screen. His real destination, Nickell says, was a secluded canyon of the Colorado River, the perfect place for a quiet suicide with a German revolver he'd kept for the purpose. "The later reports that Bierce was seen in Mexico are about the equivalent of today's Elvis Presley sightings," says Nickell. "In my opinion, he planned this all."
Frequent contributor TIM SOHN recently completed his master's in history at Cambridge University. Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift! Give the gift of Outside Magazine! Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more. |
TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
The Spoke Word: Holiday Gifts for ... A few holiday gift ideas for any cyclists in your life. Or, if you're a cyclist who's looking to... ![]()
Man Can Fly: Crosses Gorge with JetPack
Eric Scott is faster than a speeding bullet and able to leap a 1,500 foot gorge in a single ... ![]() advertisement
advertisement
Vacation PackagesMore Travel Deals |
||||||||||||||||||