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Dorothy Uhnak

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Name
  
Dorothy Uhnak

Role
  
Novelist

Movies
  
Get Christie Love!


Dorothy Uhnak dgrassetscomauthors1236483004p5416018jpg

Died
  
July 8, 2006, Greenport, New York, United States

Education
  
City College of New York, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Awards
  
Edgar Award for Best First Novel by an American Author, Grand Prix de Litterature Policiere - International Category

People also search for
  
Teresa Graves, George Kirgo, William A. Graham

Books
  
The Ledger, The Ryer Avenue Story, The Bait, Codes of Betrayal, False Witness

Dorothy Uhnak [ˈjunæk] (April 24, 1930 – July 8, 2006; née Goldstein) was an American novelist.

Uhnak was born in New York City. She attended City College of New York and the John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

Uhnak worked for 14 years as a detective for the New York City Transit Police Department.

Uhnak's debut book, Policewoman (1964), was a non-fiction autobiographical account of her law enforcement career. After its publication, she left police work and devoted herself to writing full-time. Her first novel, The Bait (1968), received a 1969 Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best First Novel (in a tie with E. Richard Johnson's Silver Street). The Bait was also made into a 1973 made-for-television film of the same title. It was followed by The Witness and The Ledger, which was adapted for the TV-movie and series Get Christie Love! starring Teresa Graves. All three novels featured Christie Opara, an NYPD detective assigned to the Manhattan District Attorney Office, where Uhnak herself was assigned for many years.

After the Opara trilogy, Ms. Uhnak branched out into longer, more ambitious police novels such as Law and Order, which became a TV-movie starring Darren McGavin; The Investigation, which was adapted into a TV-movie featuring Telly Savalas as Kojak; and Victims, which seemed to fictionalize the Kitty Genovese murder. Several of her later novels were bestsellers.

Uhnak died in Greenport, New York, reportedly of a deliberate drug overdose.

References

Dorothy Uhnak Wikipedia