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Richard Martin Stern

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Name
  
Richard Stern

Role
  
Novelist

Movies
  
The Towering Inferno


Died
  
October 31, 2001, Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States

Awards
  
Edgar Award for Best First Novel by an American Author

Books
  
The Tower, Snowbound Six, Murder in the Walls, Wildfire, The Big Bridge

Similar People
  
Thomas N Scortia, Frank M Robinson, Stirling Silliphant, Fred Koenekamp, John Guillermin

Richard Martin Stern (March 17, 1915 in Fresno, California – October 31, 2001 in Santa Fe, New Mexico) was an American novelist. Stern began his writing career in the 1950s with mystery tales of private investigators, winning a 1959 Edgar Award for Best First Novel, for The Bright Road to Fear.

He was most notable for his 1973 novel The Tower, in which a fire engulfs a new metal-and-glass frame skyrise. Stern was inspired to write the novel by the construction of the World Trade Center in New York City. Warner Brothers bought the rights to the novel shortly after its publication for roughly $400,000, and Stern's book eventually became the movie The Towering Inferno, directed by Irwin Allen and John Guillermin and featuring an all-star cast. With an fourteen million dollar budget, the film went on to earn over a hundred million at the American box office.

Stern was known for his "brainy, digressive," novels, mainly mysteries and disaster-related suspense. He died on October 31, 2001 after prolonged illness. He was 86.

References

Richard Martin Stern Wikipedia