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70 pages, Paperback
First published December 1, 1943

"Other men are leading exciting lives, but I – well, I’m just a small-town bank clerk. I never did anything really useful or interesting, and it looks as if I never will. I might just as well be dead. Sometimes I wish I were. In fact, I wish I’d never been born!”George Pratt is staring into the dark waters of the river on Christmas Eve, depressed about his failure of a life, when he's met by an older man who mysteriously grants his wish. The man sends George off with a sales bag full of brushes (like the old Fuller Brush door-to-door salesmen) to see what his town and family are like now that George has never been born.
When he found himself unable to find a publisher for his story, author Philip Van Doren Stern printed up copies of the “The Greatest Gift” and gave them out as Christmas cards in 1943. Eventually, the story came to the attention of director Frank Capra, who explained later, “It was the story I had been looking for all my life! A good man, ambitious. But so busy helping others, life seems to pass him by…Through the eyes of a guardian angel he sees the world as it would have been had he not been born."The movie It's a Wonderful Life was initially not a success, despite its star and director. It was quickly forgotten, so much so that the movie’s copyright wasn’t renewed in the 70s (under the old copyright laws renewal was required after 28 years), so it was considered to be in the public domain for many years. That led to its being shown on TV so often - because FREE!! - that this all-but-forgotten movie became extremely popular. When that happened, the movie’s studio owner started enforcing the copyright of the movie’s music and the underlying story - this story here, which the studio bought the copyright for. So basically they back-doored the copyright protection. Here’s an article on it: https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2013/...
The Greatest Gift was eventually made into an actual published work in 1944, one year after Stern had sent it out as a Christmas present, being published in Reader’s Scope magazine. One month later, it was also published in Good Housekeeping under the title “The Man Who Was Never Born.” Stern also managed to get it published in book form around this time, with illustrations for the story done by Rafaello Busoni.