Lawrence Block (born June 24, 1938) is an American crime
writer best known for two long-running New York–set series about the recovering
alcoholic P.I. Matthew Scudder and the gentleman burglar Bernie Rhodenbarr.
Block was named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America in 1994.
Born in Buffalo, N.Y., Lawrence Block attended Antioch
College in Yellow Springs, OH, but left before graduating. His earliest work,
published pseudonymously in the 1950s, was mostly in the soft-porn mass market
paperback industry, an apprenticeship he shared with fellow mystery author
Donald E. Westlake.
Block describes the early sex novels as a valuable
experience, noting that despite the titillating content of the books (rather
mild by later standards of adult fiction) he was expected to write fully
developed novels with plausible plots, characters and conflicts. He further
credits the softcore novels as a factor in his prolific output; writing 15 to
20 sex novels per year to support himself financially, Block was forced to
learn to write in a manner that required little revision and editing of his
first drafts.
Block's most famous creation, the ever-evolving Matthew
Scudder, was introduced in 1976's The Sins of the Fathers as an alcoholic
ex-cop working as an unlicensed private investigator in Hell's Kitchen.
Originally published as paperbacks, the early novels are in many ways
interchangeable; the second and third entries—In the Midst of Death (1976) and
Time to Murder and Create (1977)—were written in the opposite order from their
publication dates. 1982's 8 Million Ways to Die (filmed in 1986 by Hal Ashby,
with unpopular results) breaks from that trend, concluding with Scudder introducing
himself at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting.
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