Lionel White
Lionel White | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, New York | July 9, 1905
Died | December 26, 1985 Asheville, North Carolina | (aged 80)
Occupation | Journalist, novelist |
Genre | Crime fiction, journalism |
Lionel White (9 July 1905 – 26 December 1985) was an American journalist and crime novelist,[1] several of whose dark, noirish stories were made into films. His books include The Snatchers (made into a film as The Night of the Following Day directed by Hubert Cornfield and starring Marlon Brando), The Money Trap (made into a movie by Burt Kennedy starring Glenn Ford and Elke Sommer), Clean Break (adapted by Stanley Kubrick as the basis for his 1956 film, The Killing),[2] and Obsession (adapted by Jean-Luc Godard as the basis for his 1965 film, Pierrot le fou) and by the Finnish director Seppo Huunonen for the 1974 film (Karvat) and Rafferty, adapted by 1980 Soviet Lenfilm production of the same title.
White (also known as L.W. Blanco) had been a crime reporter and began writing suspense novels in the 1950s. He wrote more than 35 books, all translated into a number of different languages. His earlier novels were published as Gold Medal crime fiction, but when Duttons began a line of mystery and suspense books, he also wrote for them. He was most well known as what a New York Times review described as "the master of the big caper."
Seven years after White's death, director Quentin Tarantino credited him, among others, as an inspiration in his 1992 film Reservoir Dogs.[3]
Novels[]
- (1952)
- (1953) (filmed in 1968 as The Night of the Following Day)
- (also released as Before I Die) (1954)
- The Big Caper (1955) (filmed in 1957 under the same title)
- (1955) (filmed in 1955 as The Killing)
- Flight into Terror (1955)
- (1955)
- (1956)
- (1956)
- (1957)
- (1957)
- (1957)
- (1958)
- (1958)
- (1958)
- (Soviet filmed in 1980 under the same title)
- (1959)
- (1959) (televised in 1961 under the same name as an episode of Thriller)
- (1960)
- (1960)
- (1960)
- (1960)
- (1961)
- (1961)
- (1962) (filmed in 1965 as Pierrot le Fou, without credit)
- The Money Trap (1963) (filmed in 1965 under the same title)
- (1964)
- (1965) (not historical fiction but a murder mystery; title references political corruption in general)
- (1966)
- The Mind Poisoners (1966) (Killmaster novel begun under the Nick Carter pseudonym; Valerie Moolman took over and finished the novel)
- (1967)
- (1967)
- (1969)
- (1970)
- (1974)
- (1974)
- (1976)
- (1978)
References[]
- ^ Hubin, Allen J. (2010). Crime Fiction IV. A Comprehensive Bibliography, 1749–2000 (Revised ed.). Locus Press. ISBN 1-55246-499-7.
- ^ Weiler, A.H. (May 21, 1956). "The Killing: New Film at the Mayfair Concerns a Robbery". The New York Times.
- ^ Gallagher, Simon (2013-01-16). "Quentin Tarantino: Definitive Guide To Homages, Influences And References". WhatCulture.com. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
External links[]
- Lionel White at IMDb
- Short bio at Good Reads
- List of writings, organized by date
- Partial filmography at Fandango
- 1905 births
- 1985 deaths
- American crime fiction writers
- Journalists from New York City
- Pulp fiction writers
- 20th-century American novelists
- American male novelists
- 20th-century American male writers
- Novelists from New York (state)
- 20th-century American non-fiction writers
- American male non-fiction writers