William Edmund Barrett

William Edmund Barrett (November 16, 1900, New York – September 14, 1986, Denver ) was an American writer, best known for the 1962 novella The Lilies of the Field.

Life
Barrett was born in New York City November 16, 1900, to John Joseph and Eleanor Margaret (Flannery) Barrett. His family was Roman Catholic. In 1916, he and his family moved to Denver, Colorado. He returned east to attend Manhattan College, from which he was graduated in 1922.

Barrett spent most of his life in Denver. From 1923 to 1929 he worked as the Rocky Mountain advertising manager for Westinghouse. He married Christine M. Rollman on February 15, 1925.

Deeply interested in aviation, he was a civilian lecturer for the United States Air Force, and worked as an aeronautics consultant with the Denver Public Library from 1941 on. He received a citation from Regis College in 1956.

Writing
In a writing career that spanned over 50 years, Barrett's works include short stories, biographies, novels, reviews and non-fiction. In 1929, he began writing freelance for pulp magazines. His first novel, Woman on Horseback was published in 1938. In 1964, he wrote Shepherd of Mankind, a biography of Pope Paul VI.

He was a member of PEN and the Authors League of America. In 1961, he received an Honorary Doctor of Literature degree from Creighton University. He was a member of the National Press Club of Washington, D.C., and the Colorado Authors League, serving as its president from 1943 to 1944.

Three of his novels were made into films:
 * The Left Hand of God, starring Humphrey Bogart
 * Lilies of the Field based on his novel The Lilies of the Field, featuring Sidney Poitier
 * Pieces of Dreams, based on The Wine and the Music, the story of a Roman Catholic priest who decides to marry a Protestant divorcee.

Barrett had been in poor health after suffering a heart attack and died in his sleep in Denver September 14, 1986 at the age of eighty-five.