Lawrence Block
Lawrence Block is an American author renowned for his contributions to crime, mystery, and suspense fiction, having published over 100 books and numerous short stories since the late 1950s.[1] Born on June 24, 1938, in Buffalo, New York, he attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, from 1955 to 1959 but left without completing his degree to pursue writing full-time.[2] Block's early career included editing at a literary agency and writing under pseudonyms for midcentury erotica, with his first credited short story, "You Can't Lose," appearing in Manhunt magazine in 1958 and his debut novel, Mona (later reissued as Grifter's Game), published in 1961.[1] Block is best known for his long-running series featuring complex protagonists, including the recovering alcoholic private investigator Matthew Scudder (debuting in The Sins of the Fathers in 1976), the burglar Bernie Rhodenbarr (starting with Burglars Can't Be Choosers in 1977), the insomniac political assassin Evan Tanner (from 1966), and the hitman John Keller (beginning in 1994).[2] His works often explore themes of addiction, morality, and urban life in New York City, with standout titles like Eight Million Ways to Die (1982) and A Walk Among the Tombstones (1992), the latter adapted into a 2014 film starring Liam Neeson.[1] Beyond novels, Block has contributed to magazines such as Playboy and The New York Times, written screenplays including for the film My Blueberry Nights (2007), and authored non-fiction books on writing like Telling Lies for Fun and Profit (1981).[1] Throughout his career, Block has received widespread acclaim, earning the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award in 1994, four Edgar Awards, four Shamus Awards, the Nero Wolfe Award, and the Cartier Diamond Dagger from the Crime Writers' Association, among others.[2] He has also been honored with lifetime achievement awards from organizations like the Private Eye Writers of America and the French Société 813.[1] Now in his late 80s, Block continues to write and resides in New York City with his wife, Lynne, while maintaining an avid interest in travel, having visited approximately 160 countries.[1]Biography
Early life
Lawrence Block was born on June 24, 1938, in Buffalo, New York, to a Jewish family.[3] He was the elder of two children, with a younger sister named Betsy.[4] Raised in Buffalo during the late 1930s and 1940s, Block experienced a conventional childhood in a city that served as a key industrial hub for the Allied war effort during World War II, contributing to local economic growth and community resilience amid national rationing and mobilization.[4] Block's father, Arthur Jerome Block, was a native New Yorker who practiced law in Buffalo.[4] His mother, Lenore Harriet Nathan Block, was a lifelong Buffalonian who managed the household while pursuing personal interests as an accomplished painter and pianist, though she never turned these talents into a professional career; she later worked as a librarian, where she became known for her engaging Story Hour programs.[3][4] The family dynamics emphasized creativity and intellectual pursuits, fostering an environment where young Lawrence began exploring writing early on, composing his first piece—a Mother's Day poem—at age ten.[4] During his childhood in the 1940s, Block developed a keen interest in mystery fiction, discovering authors like Fredric Brown in his late teens with the novel The Fabulous Clipjoint (1947), which ignited his passion for the genre amid the era's popular pulp magazines and detective stories.[5] He also showed early literary promise by winning an essay contest in the eighth grade, reflecting the supportive yet unassuming family atmosphere that encouraged his imaginative tendencies without formal pressure.[4] These formative experiences in Buffalo, including walking the city's streets as he struggled to learn to ride a bicycle, shaped his early worldview and creative inclinations.[6] Block attended Bennett High School in Buffalo, graduating in 1955.[7][8]Personal life
Block attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, during the late 1950s but departed before completing his degree, encouraged by school officials who believed he would find greater fulfillment in writing than in formal studies.[1] In 1960, Block married Loretta Kallett, with whom he had three daughters: Amy, Jill, and Alison; the marriage ended in divorce in 1973.[4] Block remarried in 1983 to Lynne Wood, a painter, and the couple settled in New York City, where they lived in the West Village neighborhood of Greenwich Village for many years.[4][9] Block and Lynne were passionate travelers, qualifying as members of the Travelers' Century Club after visiting more than 100 countries and ultimately reaching around 160 destinations together by the late 2010s.[1][2] Block himself has long maintained a residence in New York City since moving there in the early 1960s, drawn to its vibrant creative energy.[7] A significant personal milestone for Block came in April 1977, when he achieved sobriety through Alcoholics Anonymous after years of heavy drinking that had strained his first marriage and early career; he has since shared reflections on this recovery in essays and memoirs, emphasizing its transformative impact on his life.[10] Beyond travel, Block nurtures a deep interest in philately, collecting pre-1940 worldwide stamps—a hobby that provides him quiet satisfaction and has inspired columns in Linn's Stamp News.[11] In recent years, Block has spoken in interviews about scaling back his professional output, announcing in 2024 that he considered himself retired from active writing while continuing to engage with literary communities.[12]Literary career
Early career and pseudonyms
Block began his professional writing career in 1957, selling his first short stories to pulp magazines such as Manhunt, often under pseudonyms like Sheldon Lord to navigate the competitive and low-paying market of the era.[1] These early sales, including "You Can't Lose" published in the February 1958 issue of Manhunt, marked his entry into the post-pulp crime digest scene, where he honed his craft amid financial constraints and the need for rapid output.[13] The pay for such contributions was minimal, typically a few cents per word, compelling Block to supplement his income with editing jobs at literary agencies while producing fiction on the side.[14] His debut novel, Carla, appeared in 1958 under the pseudonym Sheldon Lord, fitting into the burgeoning soft-core erotica genre published by imprints like Midwood Books.[15] This work launched a prolific phase in the late 1950s and early 1960s, during which Block authored dozens of novels and stories for men's adventure and pornography magazines, employing house names such as Andrew Shaw, Paul Kavanagh, and John Warren Wells to meet publisher demands.[16] Examples include Campus Tramp (1960) as Andrew Shaw and various Midwood titles exploring taboo themes, reflecting the era's exploitative paperback market where authors churned out content for quick publication and modest advances, often as low as $500 per book.[17] By 1966, Block had completed more than 20 books under these pseudonyms, grappling with the creative and economic challenges of anonymity and genre restrictions that limited artistic control and earnings. That year, he transitioned to writing under his own name with The Thief Who Couldn't Sleep, his first Evan Tanner novel, signaling a shift toward mystery and crime fiction amid growing dissatisfaction with erotica's constraints.[18] Having left his editing positions, Block committed to full-time authorship in 1966, leveraging his accumulated experience to pursue more personal projects in the evolving crime genre.[19]Major series development
Lawrence Block introduced his most enduring character, Matthew Scudder, in the 1976 novel The Sins of the Fathers, depicting the former New York City police officer as an unlicensed private investigator grappling with the gritty underbelly of urban crime.[20] Over the subsequent decades, the series evolved significantly, shifting from hard-boiled procedural tales to introspective narratives centered on Scudder's personal redemption, particularly his battle with alcoholism and journey toward sobriety through Alcoholics Anonymous, as explored in depth starting with Eight Million Ways to Die in 1982.[20] This progression reflected Block's growing emphasis on psychological depth, transforming Scudder from a detached observer into a morally complex figure confronting guilt and ethical dilemmas in a noir-infused New York setting.[21] In 1977, Block launched the Bernie Rhodenbarr series with Burglars Can't Be Choosers, introducing a charming, literate burglar who inadvertently becomes an amateur detective after stumbling into murders during his heists.[22] The series developed as a lighter counterpoint to Scudder's darkness, blending caper comedy with clever puzzles and witty dialogue, while maintaining crime fiction's core tension through Rhodenbarr's ethical tightrope walks between theft and justice.[23] By the 1980s, entries like The Burglar Who Liked to Quote Kipling (1979) solidified its humorous tone, influenced by classic screwball mysteries but infused with Block's signature character quirks.[24] The Evan Tanner series, which Block originated in the mid-1960s with The Thief Who Couldn't Sleep, saw a notable revival in the 1980s and 1990s, beginning with Me Tanner, You Jane in 1983 and culminating in Tanner on Ice in 1998.[25] Tanner, an insomniac operative aiding lost causes worldwide, evolved from Cold War-era espionage romps to more satirical takes on global politics and personal absurdity, allowing Block to experiment with international intrigue amid his shift toward multifaceted protagonists.[26] This resurgence highlighted Block's ability to refresh earlier concepts, incorporating themes of idealism and chaos in a post-Vietnam landscape. Block's lighter, more experimental side emerged in the 1970s and 1980s through series like Chip Harrison and John Keller. The Chip Harrison books debuted in 1970 with No Score, following a young, sex-obsessed assistant to a Nero Wolfe parody detective in farcical mysteries that parodied pulp tropes with bawdy humor. Meanwhile, the Keller saga originated in short stories for Playboy magazine starting in 1989, portraying a philosophical hit man navigating moral ambiguities in everyday life; these were later compiled into the 1998 novel Hit Man, marking a playful exploration of anti-hero ethics in episodic format.[27] Throughout these developments from the 1970s to the 2000s, Block's work marked a broader career transition from pulp-influenced potboilers to richly character-driven crime fiction, drawing on noir pioneers like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler for atmospheric tension while innovating with social realism.[28] His series increasingly wove in contemporary issues such as addiction, urban isolation, and moral relativism, elevating mysteries beyond plot to examine human frailty. By the 1990s, Block had surpassed 50 published books, earning accolades like the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master title in 1994 for his contributions to the genre.[20]Later works and anthologies
In the 2010s, Lawrence Block revived several of his longstanding series with new installments that extended their narratives while reflecting his evolving style. For the Matthew Scudder series, he published A Drop of the Hard Stuff in 2011, a prequel exploring the protagonist's early struggles with alcoholism and his path to sobriety, marking the first new Scudder novel in over a decade.[29] Similarly, the Keller series continued with Hit Me in 2013, where the hitman protagonist navigates personal challenges amid professional assignments, blending humor and introspection as in earlier entries. These revivals demonstrated Block's ability to reinvigorate familiar characters for contemporary audiences, often incorporating themes of aging and redemption. Block also compiled and released The Night and the Music in 2011, a collection of eleven Matthew Scudder short stories and novelettes spanning decades of the character's history, including award-winning pieces like "By the Dawn's Early Light."[30] This volume served as a retrospective, gathering previously published works into a cohesive anthology that highlighted Scudder's enduring appeal. Later, in 2023, Block concluded the Scudder saga with The Autobiography of Matthew Scudder, a meta-narrative presented as the character's own memoir, reflecting on his life's cases and personal growth in a first-person voice that blurred fiction and autobiography.[31] Beyond series extensions, Block edited several anthologies in the 2010s and 2020s, curating contributions from prominent crime writers to explore thematic and artistic inspirations. Notable among these is In Sunlight or In Shadow (2011), which features seventeen original stories inspired by Edward Hopper's paintings, including works by authors like Michael Connelly and Stephen King.[32] He followed with From Sea to Stormy Sea (2019), another collection of seventeen tales drawn from American masterpiece paintings, emphasizing visual art's influence on noir storytelling.[33] In 2021, At Home in the Dark gathered new crime stories from writers such as Denise Mina and Joe R. Lansdale, focusing on intimate, domestic settings for suspense.[32] These editorial projects underscored Block's role in fostering the genre's collaborative spirit. Standalone novels from this period included The Girl with the Deep Blue Eyes (2015), a noir thriller revisiting pulp traditions with a tale of seduction and murder in a sun-soaked Florida setting. Block's productivity persisted into his eighties, as evidenced by A Time to Scatter Stones (2019), the eighteenth Scudder novel, which addressed themes of mortality through the detective's final case. In interviews, Block has reflected on his career's longevity, attributing sustained output to disciplined routines and adaptability to digital publishing, which allowed direct eBook releases and broader accessibility for readers.[34] He noted in a 2022 discussion that writing remains a daily practice, enabling over 100 books across six decades despite personal milestones like relocation and health challenges.[35] As of November 2025, no major new projects have been announced, though Block continues reissuing early works in hardcover formats via his newsletters.[36]Recurring characters and series
Matthew Scudder series
The Matthew Scudder series features the titular character, a former New York City police detective who becomes an unlicensed private investigator after leaving the force following a tragic shooting incident. Introduced in Lawrence Block's debut novel for the series, The Sins of the Fathers (1976), Scudder is portrayed as a gritty, divorced recovering alcoholic navigating the underbelly of New York City while grappling with personal demons and moral dilemmas.[20] His investigations often involve "favors" for friends rather than formal cases, emphasizing his outsider status in the professional world of detection.[21] Central to the series are themes of addiction recovery, moral ambiguity, and the decay of urban life in 1970s and 1980s New York, with Scudder's narrative arc shifting from hardboiled crime tales to more introspective explorations of redemption and human frailty after he achieves sobriety.[20] This evolution is particularly evident starting with Eight Million Ways to Die (1982), where Scudder confronts his alcoholism head-on, marking a turning point that infuses later books with deeper psychological realism.[20] The stories age in real time alongside Scudder, reflecting the passage of decades and his gradual personal growth.[20] The series comprises 18 novels, spanning from The Sins of the Fathers (1976) to The Autobiography of Matthew Scudder (2023), with notable installments including When the Sacred Ginmill Closes (1986), which delves into Scudder's drinking days, and A Walk Among the Tombstones (1992), highlighting his evolving role as a sober investigator.[37] Block's own experiences with recovery, detailed in his personal life, inform the authentic depiction of Scudder's journey through Alcoholics Anonymous.[38] Critics have lauded the series for its realistic portrayal of addiction recovery and AA meetings, as well as Scudder's psychological depth, often citing it as a landmark in modern crime fiction for blending noir elements with introspective character study.[39] The narrative's focus on ethical gray areas and the harsh realities of city life has earned praise for its enduring relevance and emotional authenticity.[40] Unique to the series are Scudder's key relationships, such as his mentorship of TJ, a resourceful street kid who becomes a trusted ally, and his deep bond with Elaine Mardell, a former call girl who evolves from romantic interest to wife, providing emotional anchor amid his investigations.[21] Sobriety milestones, like anniversaries marked in AA, serve as pivotal narrative devices, underscoring themes of resilience and quiet triumph over personal adversity.[20]Bernie Rhodenbarr series
Bernie Rhodenbarr is the protagonist of a comic crime fiction series by Lawrence Block, depicted as a lighthearted professional burglar who operates by night while running Barnegat Books, a used bookstore in Greenwich Village, New York City, by day. Debuting in 1977, Bernie is portrayed as an affable, middle-class thief with a code of ethics that avoids violence, deriving thrill from the act of burglary itself rather than material gain.[41] He is often partnered with his best friend Carolyn Kaiser, a lesbian dog groomer who owns a shop nearby and frequently joins him in capers, as well as Ubi, a dog whose presence adds to the series' domestic humor.[42] The character's monologues, filled with witty asides and self-deprecating humor, highlight his ethical dilemmas, such as when a routine theft uncovers a murder that implicates him.[43] The series takes a satirical approach to crime fiction, parodying detective tropes through Bernie's reluctant investigations into murders that interrupt his burglaries, often forcing him to outwit bumbling police like Sergeant Ray Kirschmann. Themes revolve around the absurdities of thievery in urban life, with frequent bookish references—ranging from classic literature to pulp fiction—that reflect Bernie's passion for reading and underscore ethical quandaries, like stealing from the deserving versus the innocent.[44] Literary allusions abound, such as in titles nodding to authors like Kipling, Spinoza, and Salinger, blending intellectual humor with the mechanics of heists and amateur sleuthing.[24] The Bernie Rhodenbarr series comprises 12 novels, spanning from its debut in 1977 to the most recent in 2022, with intermittent publication reflecting Block's diverse output. The books are:| Title | Publication Year |
|---|---|
| Burglars Can't Be Choosers | 1977 |
| The Burglar in the Closet | 1978 |
| The Burglar Who Liked to Quote Kipling | 1979 |
| The Burglar Who Studied Spinoza | 1980 |
| The Burglar Who Painted Like Mondrian | 1983 |
| The Burglar Who Traded Ted Williams | 1983 |
| The Burglar Who Thought He Was Bogart | 1994 |
| The Burglar in the Library | 1997 |
| The Burglar in the Rye | 1999 |
| The Burglar on the Prowl | 2004 |
| The Burglar Who Counted the Spoons | 2013 |
| The Burglar Who Met Fredric Brown | 2022 |
Evan Tanner series
The Evan Tanner series centers on Evan Michael Tanner, a civil liberties activist and occasional operative for an unnamed U.S. government agency, who has been unable to sleep since sustaining a shrapnel wound to his brain's sleep center during the Korean War. This condition, rendering him perpetually awake, compels Tanner to fill his endless hours by championing obscure and often quixotic causes around the globe, from aiding revolutionaries to recovering lost treasures, all while navigating international espionage. As a "joiner" by nature, Tanner belongs to hundreds of fringe organizations, including the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Order and the Flat Earth Society, reflecting his encyclopedic knowledge of eclectic subjects and his commitment to underdogs and lost causes.[18][2] The novels blend political intrigue with absurd adventures and anti-establishment satire, often poking fun at Cold War spy tropes through Tanner's improbable missions and the bureaucratic absurdities he encounters. Themes of identity and deception recur, as Tanner is frequently mistaken for a CIA agent by adversaries or a Soviet operative by his own side, leading to chaotic, globe-trotting escapades that highlight the futility of geopolitical machinations. These elements create a satirical lens on loyalty, adventure, and the human cost of ideological conflicts, delivered with witty, fast-paced prose that emphasizes resourcefulness over brute force.[47][18] The series comprises eight novels, beginning with The Thief Who Couldn't Sleep in 1966 and concluding with Tanner on Ice in 1998, alongside a handful of short stories featuring the character. The full publication order is as follows:- The Thief Who Couldn't Sleep (1966)
- The Canceled Czech (1966)
- Tanner's Twelve Swingers (1967)
- The Scoreless Thai (1967)
- Tanner's Tiger (1968)
- Tanner's Virgin (1968; also published as Here Comes a Hero)
- Me Tanner, You Jane (1969)
- Tanner on Ice (1998)
Chip Harrison series
The Chip Harrison series features a teenage protagonist who serves as both narrator and amateur detective, blending youthful escapades with mystery elements. Chip Harrison, a 17-year-old aspiring writer and self-proclaimed sex-obsessed virgin, begins his adventures in the early 1970s as he navigates personal milestones while assisting the eccentric private investigator Leo Haig. Haig, a parody of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe, is an overweight detective who lives above a brothel, collects tropical fish, and aspires to dine with his idol while settling for being the second-best sleuth in New York. Chip acts as Haig's legman and chronicler, echoing a mix of Archie Goodwin's street smarts and Holden Caulfield's adolescent angst in first-person narration.[52][53] The series explores themes of coming-of-age, sexual awakening, and parody of hardboiled detective fiction, particularly pastiches of the Nero Wolfe archetype. Chip's initial quests revolve around losing his virginity and dreaming of literary success while working odd jobs like dishwashing, before evolving into detective work filled with humorous mishaps and risqué encounters. These stories satirize classic mystery tropes through exaggerated characters and witty twists, maintaining solid plotting amid the comedy and youthful exuberance.[52][54] Publication history spans four novels originally released under the pseudonym Chip Harrison in the 1970s, later reissued under Lawrence Block's name by publishers like The Mysterious Press in the late 1980s. The books are No Score (1970), which introduces Chip's virginity quest; Chip Harrison Scores Again (1971), continuing his personal and comedic pursuits; Make Out with Murder (1974), shifting to full mystery involvement with Haig; and The Topless Tulip Caper (1975), involving a strip club murder investigation. Additionally, two short stories—"The Death of the Mallory Queen" and "As Dark as Christmas Gets" (both 1997)—feature Chip and were collected in anthologies such as Like a Lamb to Slaughter (1984).[55][56][53] In Block's career, the series represents a transitional phase, merging his early work in erotic fiction under pseudonyms with emerging mystery series, allowing experimentation with humor and first-person voice during the 1970s. Though lesser-known compared to his Matthew Scudder or Bernie Rhodenbarr novels, the Chip Harrison books are valued for their lighthearted parody, self-referential wit, and effective blend of comedy with intriguing puzzles, earning praise as entertaining entries in Block's diverse oeuvre.[4][52]Keller series
The Keller series features John Keller, a professional hitman based in New York City, who leads an otherwise unremarkable life punctuated by his hobbies of stamp collecting and solving crossword puzzles.[57] Introduced in short stories published in magazines such as Playboy during the 1990s, Keller is depicted as an isolated everyman whose routine existence contrasts sharply with his violent profession; he receives assignments via phone calls from a broker named Dot, travels to execute targets, and returns to his solitary apartment.[2] The character's debut collection, Hit Man (1998), compiles twelve of these early stories, establishing Keller as a cynical yet introspective figure grappling with the mundanity of contract killing. The series expanded into novels, with four main entries: Hit List (2000), Hit Parade (2006), Hit and Run (2008), and Hit Me (2013), alongside short story collections like Keller's Adjustment (2003). Many installments originated as standalone magazine shorts before being novelized or anthologized, allowing Block to experiment with episodic structures that blend standalone vignettes with loose narrative arcs.[58] This format innovation highlights Keller's episodic life, where jobs blend into a pattern of travel, execution, and return, often interrupted by personal attempts at normalcy, such as therapy sessions or brief relationships.[59] Central themes in the series revolve around isolation and the normalization of violence, portraying Keller's hits as bureaucratic routines akin to any office job, while his philatelic pursuits offer fleeting escapes into hobbyist normalcy. Ethical quandaries emerge as Keller confronts the moral ambiguity of his work, occasionally questioning targets he deems undeserving or even likable, yet compelled by professional obligation to proceed. These explorations underscore a tension between detachment and fleeting introspection, without descending into overt remorse.[60] Critics have praised the series for its concise, ironic style and psychological depth, noting Block's skill in humanizing a killer through black humor and subtle character insights that reveal the banality underlying extreme violence. Reviews highlight the contrast between Keller's lethal efficiency and his quest for ordinary fulfillment, cementing the series' reputation for witty, introspective crime fiction.[59][50]Other writings
Non-series novels
Lawrence Block's non-series novels encompass a diverse array of standalone works spanning over six decades, often exploring themes of crime, suspense, psychological depth, and human vulnerability without reliance on recurring characters. These novels, numbering more than 30 in total, demonstrate Block's versatility across genres, from early pulp-inspired erotic thrillers to more introspective and socially attuned suspense narratives. Many were initially published under pseudonyms such as Paul Kavanagh, Andrew Shaw, and Lee Duncan, reflecting the commercial demands of the mid-20th-century paperback market.[61][4] In the late 1950s and 1960s, Block's standalones frequently delved into erotic suspense and gritty crime stories, capturing the raw underbelly of urban life and interpersonal betrayals. Representative examples include Grifter's Game (1961), a tense tale of con artists entangled in murder and deception, and Killing Castro (1961, as Lee Duncan), a high-stakes thriller depicting a plot to assassinate Fidel Castro amid Cold War tensions. These works, characterized by fast-paced action and subtle wit, often blended sensuality with moral ambiguity, establishing Block's early reputation in the pulp tradition. Other notable titles from this era, such as The Girl with the Long Green Heart (1965) and Deadly Honeymoon (1967), further exemplify this experimental crime style, focusing on flawed protagonists navigating fraud, infidelity, and violence.[61][62][4] By the 1970s and 1980s, Block's non-series output evolved toward more psychologically complex thrillers, incorporating deeper character studies and thematic explorations of identity and isolation. After the First Death (1969) marks an early pivot, portraying a man's desperate scheme following personal loss, while Ariel (1980) offers a suspenseful narrative centered on a woman grappling with multiple personalities in a web of intrigue. This period's experimental edge is evident in Random Walk (1988), a departure from crime conventions that follows an ordinary man's cross-country odyssey of self-discovery, blending introspection with subtle suspense. These novels highlight Block's shift to action-driven yet character-focused prose, often set against New York City's vibrant yet unforgiving backdrop.[61][4][13] In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Block's standalones matured into sophisticated psychological and social commentaries, republishing and revitalizing earlier works through imprints like Hard Case Crime while introducing contemporary tales. Small Town (2003), for instance, weaves multiple viewpoints in a post-9/11 New York, examining community resilience amid a serial killer's shadow and themes of eroticism and redemption. Later examples include The Girl with the Deep Blue Eyes (2015), a neo-noir thriller about a detective's entanglement with a mysterious woman, and Dead Girl Blues (2020), which probes grief and obsession through a blues musician's unraveling life. This evolution underscores Block's progression from formulaic erotic suspense to ambitious, literary-inflected narratives that prioritize emotional depth and urban interconnectedness.[61][63][4]Non-fiction and instructional books
Lawrence Block has authored approximately ten non-fiction works, primarily instructional guides on the craft of writing fiction and reflective memoirs drawn from his extensive career in mystery and crime literature. These books draw heavily from his monthly columns in Writer's Digest magazine, which he contributed for over a decade starting in the 1970s, offering practical advice on plotting, character development, market navigation, and the psychological aspects of authorship.[64][65] His seminal instructional title, Telling Lies for Fun & Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers (1981), compiles essays that address the business and creative sides of writing, including strategies for self-discipline, handling rejections, and understanding publishing markets, making it a foundational resource for aspiring novelists. Complementing this, Spider, Spin Me a Web: A Handbook for Fiction Writers (1988) expands on narrative techniques, such as building tension and entrapping readers through structured storytelling, presented as a companion volume that emphasizes the "art of the fictioneer." Later collections like The Liar's Bible: A Handbook for Fiction Writers (2011) and The Liar's Companion: A Field Guide for Fiction Writers (2011) gather uncollected columns from his Writer's Digest tenure, providing field-tested insights into plotting mysteries, using pseudonyms effectively, and overcoming writer's block, with the former focusing on ethical "lying" in fiction and the latter serving as a portable reference for on-the-go advice.[66][67][68] Block's guides on novel composition, such as Writing the Novel from Plot to Print (1979, expanded as Writing the Novel from Plot to Print to Pixel in 2016), offer step-by-step methodologies for developing ideas into publishable manuscripts, covering everything from initial outlining to digital distribution in later editions, and have been praised for their straightforward, non-dogmatic approach suitable for genre writers. Write for Your Life: The Seminar in Book Form (1988) adapts his workshop teachings into print, encouraging writers to treat authorship as a viable profession through exercises on productivity and inspiration. These works prioritize the specifics of mystery and suspense writing, reflecting Block's expertise, and remain in print with updates, influencing generations of authors by demystifying the professional writing process.[69][64] In addition to instructional material, Block has produced memoirs that interweave personal reflections with writing insights, such as Afterthoughts: A Piecemeal Memoir (2011), which recounts anecdotes from his early career and publishing experiences in fragmented, essay-like chapters. Step by Step: A Pedestrian Memoir (2010) explores his lifelong habit of walking as a creative catalyst, linking physical movement to narrative ideation in the context of New York City's streets. Generally Speaking: A Philatelic Patchwork (2011) delves into his hobby of stamp collecting, using it as a lens to examine themes of obsession and collection akin to those in his fiction. These memoirs provide intimate glimpses into Block's evolution as a writer, often incorporating lessons on persistence and adaptation that echo his guides' themes.[64]Adaptations and media
Film and television adaptations
Several of Lawrence Block's novels and short stories have been adapted into feature films, primarily within the crime and thriller genres, though none have resulted in major television series as of 2025.[70] These adaptations often highlight the gritty, noir elements of his recurring characters, such as the recovering alcoholic private investigator Matthew Scudder and the burglar Bernie Rhodenbarr, but they vary in fidelity to the source material and critical reception.[71] The earliest notable adaptation is Nightmare Honeymoon (1974), directed by Elliot Silverstein and based on Block's 1967 novel Deadly Honeymoon. Starring Dack Rambo and Rebecca Dianna Smith as a newlywed couple terrorized by criminals during their honeymoon, the film relocates the story to rural Louisiana and emphasizes suspenseful pursuit sequences over the book's psychological depth.[72] It received mixed reviews for its low-budget execution and uneven pacing, earning a 4.4/10 rating on IMDb from user votes. In 1986, Eight Million Ways to Die, directed by Hal Ashby, adapted Block's 1982 novel of the same name, the fourth in the Matthew Scudder series. Jeff Bridges portrays Scudder as a former cop drawn into a web of prostitution, drugs, and murder in Los Angeles, with Andy Garcia as a menacing pimp; the screenplay by R. Lance Hill and Oliver Stone shifts the setting from New York and amplifies action elements.[73] Block expressed disappointment with the production's chaos, including on-set conflicts that led to reshoots, and critics noted its glossy neo-noir style but criticized its disjointed narrative, resulting in a 5.8/10 IMDb score and a 29/100 Metacritic aggregate.[74][75] The 1987 comedy-thriller Burglar, directed by Hugh Wilson, draws from Block's Bernie Rhodenbarr series, specifically The Burglar in the Closet (1978), though it significantly alters the protagonist by gender-swapping Rhodenbarr into Bernice, played by Whoopi Goldberg, alongside Bobcat Goldthwait as her accomplice. The plot follows the burglar-bookstore owner framed for murder after a heist gone wrong, blending humor with caper elements in a San Francisco setting.[76] Goldberg's energetic performance was a highlight, but the film struggled with tonal inconsistencies and received lukewarm responses, holding a 27% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 11 reviews.[77] A French adaptation, Counter Investigation (Contre-enquête, 2007), directed by Franck Mancuso, is based on a short story by Block. Jean Dujardin stars as a police officer investigating doubts about the conviction in his daughter's rape and murder, exploring themes of doubt and revenge in a taut procedural format.[78] The film earned praise for its emotional intensity and Dujardin's restrained acting, achieving a 6.7/10 IMDb rating, though some noted its bleak tone limited broader appeal.[79] The most prominent recent adaptation is A Walk Among the Tombstones (2014), directed and written by Scott Frank, based on Block's 1992 novel, the tenth Scudder entry. Liam Neeson embodies the unlicensed investigator hired by a drug lord (Dan Stevens) to find kidnappers targeting women in New York's criminal underbelly, with Adam David Thompson as his young sidekick TJ. Block consulted on the script and praised Frank's faithful yet cinematic approach, which retains the book's dark atmosphere while streamlining subplots.[80][81] Critics appreciated its moody noir vibe and Neeson's gravelly intensity, awarding it a 68% Rotten Tomatoes score from 161 reviews and a 3.5/4 from Roger Ebert's site for its gripping tension, though some found the violence gratuitous.[82][83] Overall, Block's film adaptations have elicited mixed responses, with earlier efforts criticized for production issues and deviations, while the 2014 entry stands out for better capturing his signature blend of moral ambiguity and urban grit. Block has occasionally contributed to screenplays, such as co-writing the original 2007 drama My Blueberry Nights with Wong Kar-wai, but he has no direct writing credits on his adaptations beyond consultations.[70] No television series based on his works have been produced to date.[84]Other media appearances
Block's works have been extensively adapted into audiobooks, with more than 150 titles available across various platforms by 2025, many narrated by acclaimed voice actors. For the Matthew Scudder series, Joe Barrett has been a prominent narrator, delivering performances for titles such as A Long Line of Dead Men (2014) and A Ticket to the Boneyard (2014), bringing depth to the character's introspective tone. Other series feature narrators like Richard Ferrone for Bernie Rhodenbarr books, including Burglars Can't Be Choosers, and George Guidall for the Keller stories, such as Hit List. Block himself has narrated several of his own works, including early abridgements and the 2020 Scudder novella A Time to Scatter Stones, emphasizing his personal connection to the material.[85][86][87] In 2018, Block's novel Eight Million Ways to Die was adapted into a graphic novel illustrated by John K. Snyder III and published by IDW Publishing, marking the first comic book adaptation of his work and featuring an introduction by Block. The noir-style artwork captures the gritty atmosphere of the Matthew Scudder story.[88] Block has been a regular participant at mystery conventions, particularly Bouchercon, where he has appeared multiple times, including as Guest of Honor in 1989 and interviewing Ian Rankin in 2018. At these events, he often participates in panels sharing writing tips and insights into craft, drawing on his decades-long career. He has also attended Edgar Awards ceremonies, receiving multiple honors and engaging with the mystery community during the annual dinners, such as the 1994 event where he was awarded the Grand Master title by the Mystery Writers of America.[89][90][91] In the 2020s, Block has appeared in numerous interviews and podcasts, discussing his longevity in the genre and recent works like the 2023 The Autobiography of Matthew Scudder. Notable appearances include the Joy podcast hosted by Craig Ferguson in 2025, where he reflected on concluding his major series, and the WRITER 2.0 podcast in an earlier episode exploring his career transitions. His contributions extend to literary discussions on platforms like This Is Horror in 2024, focusing on Dead Girl Blues and film adaptations without delving into production details.[92][93][94][95] Block maintains an active online presence through his website's blog and a Substack newsletter, where he shares excerpts, updates on new releases, and reflections on writing up to 2025. These platforms feature posts on backlist management and seasonal newsletters, engaging directly with readers. Additionally, he contributes to YouTube content via his author channel, including interviews and commentary on writing, as well as occasional readings and tributes that highlight his influence in crime fiction.[96][97][98]Awards and honors
Major awards
Lawrence Block has received numerous prestigious awards throughout his career, recognizing his contributions to crime fiction. In 1994, he was named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America, the organization's highest honor for lifetime achievement in the field.[91] Block is a five-time winner of the Edgar Allan Poe Award from the Mystery Writers of America. He received the Edgar for Best Novel in 1992 for A Dance at the Slaughterhouse, the tenth book in his Matthew Scudder series.[99] His short story wins include "By Dawn's Early Light" in 1985, "Keller's Therapy" in 1994, "Keller on the Spot" in 1998, and "Autumn at the Automat" in 2017.[100][101] He has won the Shamus Award from the Private Eye Writers of America four times, all for works in the Matthew Scudder series. These include Eight Million Ways to Die for Best P.I. Hardcover Novel in 1983, A Ticket to the Boneyard for Best P.I. Paperback Original in 1992, The Devil Knows You're Dead for Best P.I. Hardcover Novel in 1994, and A Long Line of Dead Men for Best P.I. Hardcover Novel in 1995.[102] In 2004, Block was awarded the Cartier Diamond Dagger by the Crime Writers' Association of the United Kingdom, honoring outstanding lifetime achievement in crime writing.[103] Block received the Maltese Falcon Award from Japan's Maltese Falcon Society twice: in 1987 for When the Sacred Ginmill Closes and in 1992 for A Ticket to the Boneyard.[104] He also won the Nero Wolfe Award in 1979 for The Burglar Who Liked to Quote Kipling, recognizing excellence in crime fiction.[2] Additionally, he received the Philip Marlowe Award from the Private Eye Writers of America for lifetime achievement in private eye fiction.[1]Nominations and other recognitions
Block has received multiple nominations for the Edgar Allan Poe Awards from the Mystery Writers of America, including for Best Novel for A Long Line of Dead Men in 1995 and for Best Paperback Original for Time to Murder and Create in 1978.[105][31] He was also nominated for Best Short Story for "A Blow for Freedom" in 1992 and for "Looking for David" in 1999.[106][107] In addition to Edgar nominations, Block earned nominations for the Anthony Awards, such as Best Novel for When the Sacred Ginmill Closes in 1987 and Best Short Story for "Autumn at the Automat" in 2017.[31][108] He received similar recognition from the Macavity Awards, including Best Mystery Novel for When the Sacred Ginmill Closes in 1987 and Best Short Story for "Autumn at the Automat" in 2017.[109][110] Internationally, Block has been honored with two Societe 813 Trophies from the French mystery organization for his contributions to the genre.[1] Other recognitions include serving as president of the Mystery Writers of America in 2000 and as a board member earlier in his career, as well as his 2004 induction into the Crime Writers' Association Hall of Fame via the Cartier Diamond Dagger for lifetime achievement.[1][2][7] In the 2020s, Block continued to receive acclaim at mystery conventions for anthologies like In Sunlight or in Shadow, though no major new wins were recorded as of 2025.[111]Bibliography
Series bibliographies
Lawrence Block's recurring series feature several long-running protagonists, with bibliographies organized here by series in chronological order of first publication. The lists focus on novels, with short story collections noted for relevant series. Publishers varied over time, with early works often issued by Dell or Fawcett for paperbacks, transitioning to Arbor House, William Morrow, and Henry Holt for hardcovers in later decades, and many reissued by LB Originals or HarperCollins in ebook formats.[63][61] Matthew Scudder seriesThe Matthew Scudder series includes 15 novels published from 1976 to 2011, plus additional novellas and collections, with a recent autobiographical work in 2023 bringing the total core entries to 18 when including select shorter works integrated into the chronology. The novels are:
- The Sins of the Fathers (1976, Dell)
- In the Midst of Death (1976, Dell)
- Time to Murder and Create (1977, Dell)
- A Stab in the Dark (1981, St. Martin's Press)
- Eight Million Ways to Die (1982, Arbor House)
- When the Sacred Ginmill Closes (1986, Arbor House)
- Out on the Cutting Edge (1989, Arbor House)
- A Ticket to the Boneyard (1990, William Morrow)
- A Dance at the Slaughterhouse (1991, William Morrow)
- A Walk Among the Tombstones (1992, William Morrow)
- The Devil Knows You're Dead (1993, William Morrow)
- A Long Line of Dead Men (1994, William Morrow)
- Everybody Dies (1998, William Morrow)
- All the Flowers Are Dying (2005, William Morrow)
- A Drop of the Hard Stuff (2011, Henry Holt)
Shorter works include the novella collection The Night and the Music (2011, William Morrow) and The Autobiography of Matthew Scudder (2023, Subterranean Press), which extends the character's narrative. Numerous short stories appear in anthologies, collected in volumes like The Night and the Music.[112][113][95]
The Bernie Rhodenbarr series consists of 12 novels from 1977 to 2020, published primarily by Random House and later Mulholland Books, with three short story collections featuring the character. The novels are:
- Burglars Can't Be Choosers (1977, Random House)
- The Burglar in the Closet (1978, Random House)
- The Burglar Who Liked to Quote Kipling (1979, Random House)
- The Burglar Who Studied Spinoza (1980, Random House)
- The Burglar Who Painted Like Mondrian (1983, Random House)
- The Burglar Who Just Had to Dance (1988, Random House)
- The Burglar in the Library (1997, Dutton)
- The Burglar in the Rye (1999, Dutton)
- The Burglar on the Beach (2004, William Morrow)
- The Burglar Who Thought He Was Bogart (2006, William Morrow)
- The Burglar Who Counted the Spoons (2013, Mulholland Books)
- The Burglar in Short Order (2020, Mulholland Books)
Short story collections include The Burglar in the Library (expanding the 1997 novel), The Burglar Who Smelled Smoke (1997), and The Burglar Who Liked Baseball (2000), with stories also in broader anthologies.[24][23][45]
The Evan Tanner series features 7 novels published between 1966 and 1971, with an additional entry in 1998; early books were issued by Gold Medal Books, a Fawcett imprint. The novels are:
- The Thief Who Couldn't Sleep (1966, Gold Medal)
- The Canceled Czech (1966, Gold Medal)
- Tanner's Twelve Swingers (1967, Gold Medal)
- The Scoreless Thai (aka Two for Tanner, 1967, Gold Medal)
- Tanner's Tiger (1968, Gold Medal)
- Tanner's Virgin (1968, Gold Medal)
- Me Tanner, You Jane (1971, Gold Medal)
- Tanner on Ice (1998, Dutton)
No dedicated short story collections exist for Tanner, though the character appears in select anthologies.[25][26][48]
The Chip Harrison series includes 4 novels from 1970 to 1980, written under the pseudonym Chip Harrison for some early entries and published by Dell. The novels are:
- No Score (1970, Dell)
- Chip Harrison Scores Again (1971, Dell)
- Make Out with Murder (aka The Five Little Rich Girls, 1974, Dell)
- The Topless Tulip Caper (1980, Dell)
A short story, "As Dark as Christmas Gets" (2005), features Harrison and is collected in Christmas at the Mystery Hotel.[114][115][54]
The Keller series comprises 5 novels from 1998 to 2013, published by William Morrow, plus novella and short story collections. The novels are:
- Hit Man (1998, William Morrow)
- Hit List (2000, William Morrow)
- Hit Parade (2006, William Morrow)
- Hit and Run (2008, William Morrow)
- Hit Me (2013, Mulholland Books)
Additional works include the novella Keller's Fedora (2016, LB Originals) and collections Keller's Greatest Hits (2009, William Morrow), which gathers 16 stories, and Enough of Keller (2021, LB Originals), compiling columns and additional tales. Keller stories also appear in anthologies like The Plot Thickens.[116][58][57]
Standalone works and anthologies
Lawrence Block's standalone novels represent a significant portion of his output, often exploring themes of crime, suspense, and human psychology outside the constraints of his recurring series characters. Many of these works, particularly from the late 1950s and early 1960s, were published under pseudonyms due to their erotic or pulp content, reflecting the publishing norms of the era. Later standalone novels shifted toward more mainstream mystery and literary fiction.[61] The following is a chronological list of Block's standalone novels published under his own name:- Carla (1958)
- Into the Night (1959, with Cornell Woolrich)
- 69 Barrow Street (1959)
- Campus Tramp (1959)
- Candy (1960)
- A Girl Called Honey (1960)
- Kept (1960)
- A Strange Kind of Love (1960)
- The Adulterers (1960)
- Grifter's Game (1961; later retitled Mona)
- A Diet of Treacle (1961)
- Cinderella Sims (1961)
- Killing Castro (1961)
- Coward's Kiss (1961)
- $20 Lust (1961)
- The Twisted Ones (1961)
- Borderline (1962)
- The Case of the Pornographic Photos (1962; later retitled Markham)
- Strange Embrace (1962)
- Sin Hellcat (1962)
- Lucky at Cards (1964)
- The Girl with the Long Green Heart (1965)
- Deadly Honeymoon (1967)
- After the First Death (1969)
- The Specialists (1969)
- Ronald Rabbit Is a Dirty Old Man (1971)
- A Week as Andrea Benstock (1975)
- Ariel (1979)
- Code of Arms (1981, with Harold King)
- Random Walk (1988)
- The Lost Cases of Ed London (2001)
- Small Town (2002)
- Community of Women (2010)
- The Girl with the Deep Blue Eyes (2015)
- Passport to Peril (2016, with Anne Campbell Clark)
- Sinner Man (2016)
- April North (2019)
- Dead Girl Blues (2020)
- Such Men Are Dangerous (1969)
- The Triumph of Evil (1972)
- Not Comin' Home to You (1974)
- Threesome (1971)
- Enough of Sorrow (1973)
- Shadows (1975; reissued 2016)
- The Trouble with Eden (1975; reissued 2016)
- Warm and Willing (1976; reissued 2016)
- Thirty (1977; reissued 2016)
- Getting Off (2011; reissue)
- A Madwoman's Diary (2011; reissue)
- Like a Lamb to Slaughter (1984)
- Sometimes They Bite (1984)
- Some Days You Get the Bear (1993)
- By the Dawn's Early Light: And Other Stories (1994)
- Enough Rope (2002)
- The Crazy Years (2004)
- Catch and Release (2011)
- Resume Speed and Other Stories (2018)
- From Sea to Stormy Sea (2019)
- Chapter and Hearse (1985)
- The Perfect Murder (1991)
- The Plot Thickens (1997)
- Manhattan Noir (2006)
- Manhattan Noir 2: The Classics (2008)
- In Sunlight or In Shadow: Stories Inspired by the Paintings of Edward Hopper (2011)
- Alive in Shape and Color: Stories Inspired by the Paintings of Matisse, Cézanne, Hopper, de Chirico, and Picasso (2017)
- At Home in the Dark (2019)
- The Darkling Halls of Ivy (2020)