Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Richard Dooling

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Pen name
  
Eleanor Druse

Role
  
Novelist

Nationality
  
United States

Education
  
Saint Louis University

Period
  
1992 - present

Movies
  
Critical Care

Name
  
Richard Dooling


Richard Dooling lifeboatcomboardricharddoolingjpg

Occupation
  
novelist, screenwriter, attorney

Genre
  
Literary fiction, legal thriller, satire, horror

Nominations
  
National Book Award for Fiction

Books
  
White man's grave, Rapture for the Geeks, Bet Your Life, Critical Care, Blue streak

Richard Patrick Dooling (born 1954) is an American novelist and screenwriter. He is best known for his novel White Man's Grave, a finalist for the 1994 National Book Award for Fiction, and for co-producing and co-writing the 2004 ABC miniseries Stephen King's Kingdom Hospital.

Dooling's first novel, Critical Care (1992), was made into a 1997 movie of the same title, directed by Sidney Lumet and starring James Spader and Kyra Sedgwick. His next three novels—White Man's Grave (1994), Brain Storm (1998), and Bet Your Life (2002)—were all New York Times Notable Books. In conjunction with Kingdom Hospital, he also wrote The Journals of Eleanor Druse (2004), writing as Eleanor Druse, a character in the miniseries. Dooling's short story "Bush Pigs" was read as part of Selected Shorts, a program produced by Symphony Space in New York and aired on NPR. The performance was later included on the CD Getting There from Here, a compilation of listeners' favorites from the program.

His nonfiction book Blue Streak: Swearing, Free Speech, and Sexual Harassment (1996) is an examination of the social and legal implications of profane speech. In Rapture for the Geeks: When AI Outsmarts IQ (2008) he explores the implications of machine intelligence overtaking human intelligence. He has also written op-ed pieces for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The National Law Journal.

Dooling was born in Omaha, Nebraska, and is a graduate of Saint Louis University (1976) and Saint Louis University School of Law (1987). He has been a practicing attorney and developer of web-based legal tools for the St. Louis firm Bryan Cave. As of 2010, Dooling is a visiting professor at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln College of Law.

Works

  • Novels
  • Critical Care (1992)
  • White Man's Grave (1994)
  • Brain Storm (1998)
  • Bet Your Life (2002)
  • The Journals of Eleanor Druse (writing as Eleanor Druse) (2004)
  • Nonfiction
  • Blue Streak: Swearing, Free Speech, and Sexual Harassment (1996)
  • Rapture for the Geeks: When AI Outsmarts IQ (2008)
  • As contributor or editor
  • Rendezvous in Black by Cornell Woolrich. Modern Library 20th Century Rediscoveries, 2004 [1948]. (Introduction)
  • References

    Richard Dooling Wikipedia