Lincoln Child
Lincoln Child | |
---|---|
Born | Westport, Connecticut, U.S. | 13 October 1957
Occupation | Novelist, editor |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Carleton College |
Genre | Thriller, Techno-thriller, Adventure |
Notable works | Agent Pendergast series, Jeremy Logan series, Gideon Crew series |
Website | |
www |
Lincoln Child (13 October 1957) is an American author of techno-thriller and horror novels. Though he is most well known for his collaborations with Douglas Preston (including the Agent Pendergast series and the Gideon Crew series, among others), he has also written seven solo novels, including the Jeremy Logan series. Over twenty of the collaborative novels and most of his solo novels have become New York Times bestsellers, some reaching the #1 position. Child and Preston's first novel together, Relic, was adapted into a feature film. Their books are notable for their thorough research and scientific accuracy.
Life and career
Born in Westport, Connecticut, but now a Florida resident, Child graduated from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, with a major in English.
Soon afterward, in 1979, he secured a job as an editorial assistant at St. Martin's Press. By 1984, Child had become full editor. While in this position, he edited hundreds of books, most titles being American and English fiction.
In 1987, after founding the company's mass-market horror division, Child left the St. Martin's Press to become a systems analyst at MetLife. Child's first novel (co-written with Preston), Relic, was published in 1995. He left the company a few years later to write full-time.
In 2002, Child began his solo career with the debut novel Utopia, then wrote Death Match in 2004. These two novels were stand-alone works that introduced a new set of characters each time. However, with Deep Storm in 2007, Child introduced the character of Dr. Jeremy Logan, a Yale professor of medieval history and enigmalogist, whose role over the course of the series gradually increases with each book. He appeared in only one chapter in Deep Storm, then became a supporting character in Terminal Freeze (2009), before finally becoming the main protagonist in The Third Gate (2012). Utopia, Deep Storm, and Terminal Freeze all went on to become New York Times best sellers.
Child is now a resident of Sarasota, Florida.[1]
Bibliography
Solo works
Stand-alone novels
- Utopia (2002)
- Death Match (2004)
Jeremy Logan series
- Deep Storm (2007)
- Terminal Freeze (2009)
- The Third Gate (2012)
- The Forgotten Room (2015)[2]
- Full Wolf Moon (2017)
- Chrysalis (2022)
Collaborations with Douglas Preston
Agent Pendergast series
- Relic (1995)
- Reliquary (1997)
- The Cabinet of Curiosities (2002)
- Still Life with Crows (2003)
- Diogenes Trilogy
- Brimstone (2004)
- Dance of Death (2005)
- The Book of the Dead (2006)
- The Wheel of Darkness (2007)
- Cemetery Dance (2009)
- Helen Trilogy
- Fever Dream (2010)
- Cold Vengeance (2011)
- Two Graves (2012)
- White Fire (2013)
- Blue Labyrinth (2014)
- Crimson Shore (2015)
- The Obsidian Chamber (2016)
- City of Endless Night (2018)
- Verses for the Dead (2018)
- Crooked River (2020)
- Bloodless (2021)
- The Cabinet of Dr. Leng (2023)
Gideon Crew series
- Gideon's Sword (2011)[3]
- Gideon's Corpse (2012)
- The Lost Island (2014)[4]
- Beyond the Ice Limit (2016)
- The Pharaoh Key (2018)[5]
Nora Kelly series
- Old Bones (2019)
- The Scorpion's Tail (2021)
- Diablo Mesa (2022)
- Dead Mountain (2023)
Other
- Mount Dragon (1996)
- Riptide (1998)
- Thunderhead (1999)
- The Ice Limit (2000)
Short stories
- "Gone Fishing" from Thriller: Stories to Keep You Up All Night (2006)
- "Extraction" [eBook] (2012)
- "Gaslighted: Slappy the Ventriloquist Dummy vs. Aloysius Pendergast" [eBook] (2014)[6]
See also
- Vincent D'Agosta, another character from Child's novels
References
- ^ Rohan, Virginia. "THE MONSTER ON THE DOODLE PAD – LINCOLN CHILD'S `THE RELIC' IS THE PRODUCT", The Record (Bergen County), 28 January 1997. Accessed 5 December 2007. "When Lincoln Child was just a lad, his mother handed him a big black notebook. First, he doodled in the front. Then, the Morristown novelist recalls, 'I turned to the back, and I drew something so frightening I could never look at it again.'"
- ^ results, search (12 May 2015). "The Forgotten Room: A Novel". Doubleday. Retrieved 20 April 2018 – via Amazon.
- ^ "Grand Central in New Deal with Preston/Child". Publishers Weekly. PWxyz LLC. 1 February 2010. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
- ^ "The Lost Island". hachettebookgroup.com. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^ The Pharaoh Key. Hachette Book Group. 2018. ISBN 9781455525805.
- ^ Noble, Barnes &. "Gaslighted: Slappy the Ventriloquist Dummy vs. Aloysius Pendergast". Barnes & Noble. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
External links
- 1957 births
- Living people
- American horror novelists
- Writers from Morristown, New Jersey
- Writers from Westport, Connecticut
- Techno-thriller writers
- Carleton College alumni
- 20th-century American novelists
- 21st-century American novelists
- Novelists from Connecticut
- Novelists from New Jersey
- American male novelists
- American science fiction writers
- 20th-century American male writers
- 21st-century American male writers