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  • The author E.L. Doctorow in New York, Oct. 12, 1984....

    The author E.L. Doctorow in New York, Oct. 12, 1984. Doctorow, whose critically admired and award-winning novels situated fictional characters in recognizable historical contexts, died Tuesday.

  • The author E.L. Doctorow in the Greenwich Village neighborhood in...

    The author E.L. Doctorow in the Greenwich Village neighborhood in New York, Oct. 22, 1985. Doctorow, whose critically admired and award-winning novels situated fictional characters in recognizable historical contexts, died Tuesday.

  • The author E.L. Doctorow, whose novel “Ragtime” was adapted as...

    The author E.L. Doctorow, whose novel “Ragtime” was adapted as a Broadway musical, at the new Ford Center for the Performing Arts, where it was the inaugural production, in New York, Dec. 3, 1997. Doctorow, whose critically admired and award-winning novels situated fictional characters in recognizable historical contexts, died Tuesday. He was 84.

  • In this Nov. 16, 2005 file photo, National Book Award...

    In this Nov. 16, 2005 file photo, National Book Award finalist E.L. Doctorow poses for photos before the award ceremonies in New York. According to his son Richard Doctorow, the "Ragtime" author died Tuesday in a New York hospital from complications related to lung cancer.

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NEW YORK – Writer E.L. Doctorow, who wryly reimagined the American experience in such novels as “Ragtime” and “The March” and applied its lessons to the past and future in fiction and nonfiction, has died. He was 84.

His son, Richard Doctorow, confirmed he died Tuesday at a New York hospital from complications of lung cancer. He lived in New York and Sag Harbor, N.Y.

Considered one of the major authors of the 20th century, Doctorow enjoyed critical and popular success over his 50-year career. He won the National Book Award for fiction in 1986 for “World’s Fair” and the National Book Critics Circle award in 1989 for “Billy Bathgate” and in 2005 for “The March.”

Besides his 10 novels, he published two books of short stories, a play called “Drinks Before Dinner” and numerous essays and articles.

“I don’t know what I set out to do,” Doctorow said in 2006 after the publication of “The March,” his acclaimed Civil War novel. “Someone pointed out to me a couple of years ago that you could line them up and in effect now with this book, 150 years of American history. … And this was entirely unplanned.”

Edgar Lawrence Doctorow was born Jan. 6, 1931, in New York. He was named after Edgar Allan Poe, whom he often disparaged as America’s “greatest bad writer.” His father, David Doctorow, ran a music store, and his mother, Rose Doctorow, was a pianist.

Young Edgar Doctorow read widely and decided he would become a writer at age 9.

“I began to ask two questions while I was reading a book that excited me,” he recalled. “Not only what was going to happen next, but how is this done? How is it that these words on the page make me feel the way I’m feeling? This is the line of inquiry that I think happens in a child’s mind, without him even knowing he has aspirations as a writer.”

Doctorow graduated from the Bronx High School of Science and from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio. He also served in the U.S. Army, stationed in Germany.

In the 1950s Doctorow worked as a script reader for Columbia Pictures, reading novels and summarizing them for possible film treatment. That job led him to his first novel, “Welcome to Hard Times,” a Western published in 1960.

His third novel, “The Book of Daniel,” published in 1971, catapulted him into the top rank of American writers.

A fictionalized account of the Rosenberg case, “The Book of Daniel” probed the central character’s struggles over the deaths of his parents, executed as Communists in the 1950s. New Republic critic Stanley Kauffmann called it “the political novel of our age, the best American work of its kind that I know since Lionel Trilling’s ‘The Middle of the Journey.“’

“Ragtime” in 1975 served up a Dickensian stew of Gilded Age New York, mixing historical figures such as J.P. Morgan, Harry Houdini and Emma Goldman with invented ones. The central character, Coalhouse Walker Jr., was a black musician victimized by racism.

Historical and made-up characters also peopled 1989’s “Billy Bathgate,” featuring the real-life gangster Dutch Schultz, and “The March,” which he called his “Russian novel” because of its epic scope.

“The March” depicted William Tecumseh Sherman’s march through Georgia and the Carolinas from the vantage points of Sherman himself, a mixed-race freed slave girl, a brilliant but dispassionate battlefield surgeon, two Confederate prisoners who adopt various disguises and others.

The main character was in a sense the Union army and the human flotsam and jetsam it picked up along the way.

Several of Doctorow’s novels including “Ragtime” and “Billy Bathgate” were made into movies.