Occupation novelist Role Writer Name Robert Fish | Period 1948–1981 Nationality American Movies Bullitt | |
Born 21 August 1912Cleveland, Ohio, United States ( 1912-08-21 ) Pen name Robert L. Pike,Lawrence Roberts Awards Edgar Award for Best Short Story Short stories Hijack, Moonlight Gardener, Double Entry, The Hochmann Miniatures Books Mute Witness, The Assassination Bureau - Ltd, The Incredible Schlock, My Life and the Beautiful, The memoirs of Schlock Similar People Alan Trustman, Peter Yates, Michael Relph, Cornell Woolrich, William A Fraker |
2014 edgar awards robert l fish award speech
Robert Lloyd Fish (August 21, 1912 – February 23, 1981) was an American writer of crime fiction. His first novel, The Fugitive, gained him the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Allan Poe Award for best first novel in 1962, and his short story "Moonlight Gardener" was awarded the Edgar for best short story in 1972. His 1963 novel Mute Witness, written under the pseudonym Robert L. Pike, was filmed in 1968 as Bullitt, starring Steve McQueen. [Not same as Robert L. Fish, an author known for fictions such as 'Pursuit' ('Twist of Fate'- 1989 movie adaptation), 'The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes', etc.]
Contents
- 2014 edgar awards robert l fish award speech
- 2015 Edgar Awards Robert L Fish Award
- Career
- Awards
- Legacy
- References
2015 Edgar Awards Robert L. Fish Award
Career
Fish was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and studied engineering at Case School of Applied Science, where he graduated in 1933. Thereafter, he had a successful career in engineering management and consultancy, working in several countries that he later used as settings for his stories.
In 1960, while working in Rio de Janeiro, where he had lived for the previous decade, Fish submitted his first short story to Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. He subsequently wrote over 30 novels and numerous short stories.
In 1963, Fish completed Jack London's unfinished novel The Assassination Bureau, Ltd based on the unfinished manuscript with additional notes by London and an ending outline done by London's wife Charmian shortly before her death in 1955.
Fish died in February 1981 at his home in Trumbull, Connecticut.
Awards
Two other short stories, "Double Entry" (EQMM, January 1969) and "Hijack" (Playboy, August 1972), were nominated for Edgars in the "best short story" category, but did not win the award.
Legacy
The Robert L. Fish Memorial Award, sponsored by the author's estate, has been awarded annually since 1984 by the Mystery Writers of America for the best first short story by an American author.