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Lee Child

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Writer

Period
  
1985–present

Height
  
1.93 m


Signature
  

Spouse
  
Jane Grant (m. 1975)

Name
  
Lee Child

Siblings
  
Andrew Grant

Lee Child Jack Reacher Author Lee Child Jack Reacher Novels

Born
  
Jim Grant 29 October 1954 (age 69) Coventry, England, UK (
1954-10-29
)

Occupation
  
Novelist, writer, author

Genre
  
Crime fiction, mystery, thriller

Notable works
  
Jack Reacher series of novels

Movies
  
Jack Reacher, Jack Reacher: Never Go Back

Books
  
Personal, Make Me, One Shot, Killing Floor, Running Blind

Similar People
  
Michael Connelly, David Baldacci, Lincoln Child, Christopher McQuarrie, John Sandford

Profiles

National writers series an evening with lee child


James D. "Jim" Grant (born 29 October 1954), primarily known by his pen name Lee Child, is a British author who writes thriller novels, his Jack Reacher novel series. The books follow the adventures of a former American military policeman, Jack Reacher, who wanders the United States. His first novel, Killing Floor, won both the Anthony Award, and the Barry Award for Best First Novel.

Contents

Lee Child Lee Child Biography Books and Facts

Writers on writing lee child on starting writing after 40


Early life

Lee Child Lee Child Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Jim Grant was born in Coventry, England. His father was a civil servant. He is one of four sons; his younger brother, Andrew Grant, is also a thriller novelist. Grant's family relocated to Handsworth Wood in Birmingham when he was four years old so that the boys could receive a better education. Grant attended Cherry Orchard Primary School in Handsworth Wood until the age of 11. He attended King Edward's School, Birmingham.

Lee Child ToughasNails Heroes from Lee Child The Dinner Party

In 1974, at age 20, Grant studied law at University of Sheffield, though he had no intention of entering the legal profession and, during his student days, worked backstage in a theatre. After graduating, he worked in commercial television.

Television production career

Grant joined Granada Television, part of the UK's ITV Network, in Manchester as a presentation director. There he was involved with shows including Brideshead Revisited, The Jewel in the Crown, Prime Suspect, and Cracker. Grant was involved in the transmission of more than 40,000 hours of programming for Granada, writing thousands of commercials and news stories. He worked at Granada from 1977 to 1995 and ended his career there with two years as a trade union shop steward.

Writing career

After being made redundant from his job due to corporate restructuring, Grant decided to start writing novels, stating they are "the purest form of entertainment." In 1997, his first novel, Killing Floor, was published, and he moved to the United States in the summer of 1998.

His pen name "Lee" comes from a family joke about a heard mispronunciation of the name of Renault's Le Car, as 'Lee Car'. Calling anything 'Lee' became a family gag, his daughter, Ruth, was 'lee child'.

Happily for Grant, 'Child' places his books alphabetically on bookstore and library shelves between crime fiction greats Raymond Chandler and Agatha Christie.

Grant has said that he chose the name Reacher for the central character in his novels because he himself is tall and when they were grocery shopping his wife Jane remarked: "'Hey, if this writing thing doesn't pan out, you could always be a reacher in a supermarket.' ... 'I thought, Reacher — good name.'" Some books in the Reacher series are written in first person, while others are written in the third person. Grant has characterised the books as revenge stories – "Somebody does a very bad thing, and Reacher takes revenge" – driven by his anger at the downsizing at Granada. Although English, he deliberately chose to write American-style thrillers.

In 2007, Grant collaborated with 14 other writers to create the 17-part serial thriller The Chopin Manuscript, narrated by Alfred Molina. This was broadcast weekly on Audible.com between 25 September 2007 and 13 November 2007.

On 30 June 2008, it was announced that Grant would be taking up a Visiting Professorship at the University of Sheffield from November 2008. In 2009, Grant funded 52 Jack Reacher scholarships for students at the university.

Grant was elected president of the Mystery Writers of America in 2009.

Movie adaptations

In 2012, his ninth novel, One Shot, was adapted into Jack Reacher, an American thriller film starring Tom Cruise. The movie was directed and written by Christopher McQuarrie. Grant has a cameo appearance as a police desk sergeant in the film.

In 2016, his eighteenth novel, Never Go Back, was adapted into Jack Reacher: Never Go Back, with Tom Cruise reprisng the role. The movie was directed by Edward Zwick, and the screenplay was written by Richard Wenk, Zwick, and Marshall Herskovitz. In the film, the final scene is set in New Orleans, which was not a location in the book. The author approved this addition to help the New Orleans economy. In the film, Grant made a cameo appearance as a TSA agent. In the bonus footage on the Blu-ray disc, the author explained that in both movies his cameo appearance involves passing judgment on the character of Jack Reacher, and speculated that he will repeat these type of appearances in future Jack Reacher movies.

Writing style

Grant's prose has been described as "hardboiled" and "commercial" in style, with short sentences, often without a verb, more exclamations than sentences. A 2012 interview suggested that many aspects of the Jack Reacher novels were deliberately aimed at maintaining the books' profitability, rather than for literary reasons. For instance, making Jack Reacher have one parent who was French was suggested as being partly because the presence of only American members of Reacher's family would limit the series' appeal in France. The same interview stated that Grant "didn't apologise about the commercial nature" of his fiction.

Philanthropy

In January 2012, Grant donated £10,000 (about US$16,000 at the time) towards a new vehicle for Brecon Mountain Rescue Team in Wales. His brother is a senior member of the team. The team's former control vehicle was written off after a collision in 2011.

Personal life

Grant is married. He and his wife Jane reside in her native New York. They have a daughter.

Grant is a fan of Aston Villa Football Club and has been known to include the names of Aston Villa players in his books.

In 2013, the Daily Mail quoted him saying that he writes while intoxicated ("high") by cannabis and that he has smoked the recreational drug five nights a week for 44 years. However, in a phone interview in November 2013, he clarified his comments to the Irish Examiner, saying he's never written while high. "Yeah, that's true," Child told The Post-Standard. "I mean, people say to me, 'There was that story in the newspaper,' and I say, 'No, that's The Daily Mail.' In Britain, that's not a newspaper, you know, that's a scandal sheet where they make stuff up. It's not very reliable. And certainly I don't deny smoking the occasional joint, but I don't work when I'm stoned because you don't get much done that way."

Novels and awards

Note: For consistency, ISBN shows Bantam (UK) hardcover, first printings only.

Other awards

  • 2005 – The Bob Kellogg Good Citizen Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Internet Writing Community
  • 2013 – Cartier Diamond Dagger, lifetime achievement by the Crime Writers' Association
  • Other books

  • 2017 – No Middle Name (short story collection)
  • Short stories

  • "James Penney's New Identity" from Fresh Blood 3 (edited by Mike Ripley and Maxim Jakubowski) and from Thriller (US)
  • "The Snake Eater by the Numbers" from Like a Charm (edited by Karin Slaughter)
  • "Ten Keys" from The Cocaine Chronicles (edited by Jervey Tervalon and Gary Phillips)
  • "The Greatest Trick of All" from Greatest Hits (edited by Robert J Randisi)
  • "Guy Walks into a Bar..." (a prequel to Gone Tomorrow, in The New York Times
  • "Me & Mr. Rafferty" from The Dark End of the Street (edited by Jonathan Santlofer and S. J. Rozan)
  • "The Bodyguard" from First Thrills (edited by Lee Child)
  • "Second Son" (electronic short story about Jack Reacher, 15 August 2011)
  • "Addicted to Sweetness" from The Rich and the Dead (edited by Nelson DeMille)
  • "Everyone Talks" (Reacher short story, in Esquire (June/July 2012, US edition)
  • "Deep Down" (electronic short story about Jack Reacher, 16 June 2012)
  • "The Hollywood I Remember" (Short story about Jack Reacher, in short story collection Vengeance, edited by Lee Child, 2012)
  • "High Heat" (electronic short story about a teenaged Jack Reacher, 6 August 2013)
  • "Good and Valuable Consideration" from Face Off (with Joseph Finder, edited by David Baldacci)
  • "Not a Drill" (electronic short story about Jack Reacher, 29 July 2014)
  • "Small Wars" (electronic short story about Jack Reacher, 18 August 2015)
  • "Faking a Murderer" from Matchup (short story about Jack Reacher and Temperance Brennan, 6 June 2017) (with Kathy Reichs)
  • References

    Lee Child Wikipedia