Jeffery Deaver

Jeffery Deaver

Deaver at the Waterstones bookstore in England
Born (1950-05-06) May 6, 1950
Glen Ellyn, Illinois, U.S.
Occupation Writer
Genre Mystery fiction, crime writer, thriller
Relatives Julie Reece Deaver (sister)
Website
www.jefferydeaver.com

Jeffery Deaver (born May 6, 1950)[1] is an American mystery/crime writer. He has a bachelor of journalism degree from the University of Missouri and a law degree from Fordham University and originally started working as a journalist. He later practiced law before embarking on a successful career as a best-selling novelist. He has been awarded the Steel Dagger[2] and Short Story Dagger [3] from the British Crime Writers' Association and the Nero Wolfe Award, and he is a three-time recipient of the Ellery Queen Reader's Award for Best Short Story of the Year and a winner of the British Thumping Good Read Award. His novels have appeared on bestseller lists around the world, including The New York Times, The Times, Italy's Corriere della Sera, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Los Angeles Times.

Life and career

Deaver was born outside Chicago in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, and grew up in a creative family. His mother was an artist, and his father an advertising writer. [4] His sister Julie Reece Deaver is an author of young adult novels. [5] Deaver was a journalist, folksinger, and attorney.[6] He lives alone and does a great deal of cooking in all cuisines. The book that inspired him to write was From Russia With Love, a James Bond novel by Ian Fleming. [7]

Deaver's most popular series features his regular character Lincoln Rhyme, a quadriplegic detective, and NYPD Detective Amelia Sachs. Deaver stated in a 2006 Early Show interview that he would rotate between his new series and Lincoln Rhyme each year. Virtually all of his works feature a trick ending or multiple trick endings.

Deaver's 2001 book The Blue Nowhere features criminal hackers (one using social engineering to commit murder), as well as a law enforcement computer crime unit. In this book, Deaver gives credit to Lee de Forest, the inventor of the Audion (also known as the triode tube), who is thus considered to have opened the world to electronic development.)[8]

Deaver edited The Best American Mystery Stories 2009.

Three of Deaver's novels have been produced into films:

Deaver also created the characters and—in a collaboration with 14 other noted writers—wrote the 17-part serial thriller The Chopin Manuscript narrated by Alfred Molina that was broadcast on Audible.com from September 25 to November 13, 2007. It is now also available in print.

Deaver was chosen to write an official new James Bond novel:[9] Carte Blanche[10] is set in 2011 and was published on May 25, 2011.[11] He is the second American author to write Bond novels, after Raymond Benson.

Bibliography

Standalone works

Rune Trilogy

  1. Manhattan Is My Beat (1988)
  2. Death of a Blue Movie Star (1990)
  3. Hard News (1991)

John Pellam (Location Scout series)

  1. Shallow Graves (1992)
  2. Bloody River Blues (1993)
  3. Hell's Kitchen (2001)

Lincoln Rhyme

  1. The Bone Collector (1997)
  2. The Coffin Dancer (1998)
  1. The Empty Chair (2000)
  2. The Stone Monkey (2002)
  3. The Vanished Man (2003) (includes an appearance by Parker Kincaid)
  4. The Twelfth Card (2005) (includes an appearance by Parker Kincaid)
  5. The Cold Moon (2006) (Introduces Kathryn Dance)
  6. The Broken Window (2008)
  7. The Burning Wire (2010)
  8. The Kill Room (2013)
  9. The Skin Collector (2014)
  10. The Steel Kiss (2016)
  11. The Burial Hour (2017)

Kathryn Dance

  1. The Sleeping Doll (2007) (includes a brief appearance by Lincoln Rhyme)
  2. Roadside Crosses (2009)
  3. XO (2012) (includes a brief appearance by Lincoln Rhyme)
  4. Solitude Creek (May 12, 2015)

James Bond

Collections

Anthologies

References

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