![]() ![]() In that novel, Michener traced the history of the Hawaiian islands from their earliest geological formations through the arrivals of diverse immigrants from Polynesia, Japan, the Philippines, the Asian mainland and the United States. But he became best known as a specialist in narrative epics that dramatized the social and political evolution of nations and regions as experienced over generations by real and imaginary participants, a technique he first developed with his 1959 bestseller, "Hawaii." Michener also wrote travel articles, essays, novellas and short stories. The show, starring Mary Martin and Ezio Pinza, ran on Broadway for more than five years beginning in 1949, and it included some of the most popular music of the post-World War II era. It won the 1948 Pulitzer Prize for literature and became the basis for the hit musical "South Pacific," by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. Michener was 40 before he wrote his first book, "Tales of the South Pacific," but it made an immediate and lasting impact. ![]() Michener, a prolific author whose best-selling works ranged from poignant and compassionate stories of men and women in love and war to weighty novels spanning centuries and millennia while combining fiction and historical fact, died yesterday of kidney failure at his home in Austin. ![]()
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