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American novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Faye Marder Kellerman[1] (born July 31, 1952[2]) is an American writer of mystery novels, in particular the "Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus" series, as well as three nonseries books, The Quality of Mercy, Moon Music, and Straight into Darkness.
Faye Kellerman | |
---|---|
Born | St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. | July 31, 1952
Occupation | Author |
Language | English |
Education | Doctor of Dental Surgery |
Alma mater | University of California, Los Angeles |
Genre | Mystery |
Notable works | Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus novels |
Spouse | Jonathan Kellerman |
Children | 4, including Jesse Kellerman[1] |
Kellerman was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She attended UCLA, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics in 1974. Four years later, she received her doctorate of dental surgery, but she has never practiced dentistry and was a housewife before publishing her first novel. In a 1997 essay, she says she cannot pinpoint the metamorphosis from dentist to writer of detective fiction, but several factors that steered her toward mystery writing were: "a desire for justice, a suspicious nature, an overactive imagination, and of course, a penchant for the bizarre."[3]
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (June 2024) |
Kellerman is a practicing Orthodox Jew, as are her husband and son, novelists Jonathan Kellerman and Jesse Kellerman, respectively. Her writing frequently deals with Jewish themes and characters, incorporating them into the framework of the traditional mystery. The Peter Decker books, for example, center on a police detective raised as a Southern Baptist, who returns to his Jewish roots after falling in love with Rina Lazarus, an Orthodox Jew, while investigating a rape that took place near a yeshiva.
The Kellermans are the only married couple ever to appear on the New York Times bestseller list simultaneously (for two different books).[citation needed] They have four children. Their youngest child, Aliza Kellerman, co-wrote Prism (2009), a young adult novel, with her mother.[citation needed]
In 1999 Kellerman sued the writers of the 1998 film Shakespeare in Love, who she claimed stole the plotline from her 1989 novel The Quality of Mercy, in which Shakespeare romances a Jewish woman who dresses as a man, and attempts to solve a murder. Miramax Films spokesman Andrew Stengel derided the claim, filed in the US District Court six days before the 1999 Academy Awards, as "absurd", and argued that the timing "suggests a publicity stunt".[4][5] An out-of-court settlement was reached.
(Source: Bookreporter.com – Author Bibliography – Faye Kellerman Bibliography)
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