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Richard North Patterson
Richard
North Patterson (born February 22, 1947) is an American author of
Fiction. He was born in Berkeley, California, the eldest child of
a retired corporate executive and a housewife. While still a child,
he moved with his parents to Ohio. He grew up in the suburbs of
Cleveland and graduated in 1968 from Ohio Wesleyan University. In
1971 he graduated Case Western Reserve Law School and served as
an Assistant Attorney General for the state of Ohio and has been
partner in several of the countrys leading law firms. He also
served as the liaison for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
to the Watergate Special Prosecutor.
Richard did not start writing until he was 29 and already out of
law school. He began his first book, The Lasko Tangent, as part
of a creative writing course at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Once it was completed, he found a publisher, and the novel won the
Edgar Allan Poe Award in the category "Best First Mystery Novel
(American)" in 1980. In 1993, he retired from the practice
of law to devote himself to writing. Since then he has written 13
novels, with 8 consecutive international bestsellers, including
No Safe Place, Eyes of a Child, and Dark Lady. His has also won
the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière.
Patterson is currently chairman of the National Governing Board
for Common Cause. He has served on boards of several advocacy groups
dealing with gun violence, political reform, and reproductive rights.
He and his family split their time between the San Francisco Bay
Area and Martha's Vineyard.
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