mental_floss magazine
SUBSCRIBE >
GIFT SUBSCRIPTIONS >
DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS >
subscriber services >
Heading to the beach this summer? You can’t lounge around on the sand without a book, so it’s time to hit the bestseller list for a paperback that can get a little wet and sandy. How well do you know the authors of your favorite bestselling beach fare, though? We did some digging and came up with a few surprising facts on some of the literary world’s biggest cash cows.
1. Dan Brown didn’t get his start as a writer. Oh, no. Before he penned thrillers like The Da Vinci Code, Brown worked as a pop singer and songwriter. His second solo album, Angels & Demons, even shared its title with one of his literary juggernauts.
2. Former lawyer and politician John Grisham may not need to practice law now that he’s moved 250 million copies of his books, but he did head to court on one special occasion after his literary success. In 1996 Grisham returned to the courtroom to represent the family of a railroad brakeman who was killed on the job. Apparently Grisham still had his chops; he won the case (and over $650,000) for the family.
3. Nora Roberts has been a staple on the New York Times Bestseller List for years, but it wasn’t easy for her to get her foot in the door. According to Roberts, when she was submitting her manuscripts to romance giant Harlequin, the publisher sent her a note rejecting her work because they “already had their American writer.”

4. Danielle Steel’s life sounds surprisingly like something from a Danielle Steel novel. The author has been married five times, and there have been some real winners in the bunch. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, husband number two was a bank robber who was convicted of raping a woman while he was married to Steel, and the third Mr. Steel was a heroin-addicted burglar.
5. The late Sidney Sheldon wrote a whole raft of bestsellers even though he didn’t start writing novels until after he turned 50. Sheldon kept himself pretty busy before his career took off, though, by creating TV hits like The Patty Duke Show and I Dream of Jeannie. Sheldon also won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for penning The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer.
6. Bestselling thriller author John Sandford’s work may not be considered high art, but he’s got something a number of his more ambitious literary colleagues would kill for: a Pulitzer Prize. Sandford, whose real name is John Camp, picked up a Pulitzer for Non-Deadline Feature Writing in 1986 for a series of articles in the Saint Paul Pioneer Press that chronicled a year in the life of a Minnesota farming family.
7. Having Stephen King as your dad has its perks. In the late 80s, King’s son Owen was just as obsessed with G.I. Joe as any other boy. Owen, though, got a little shout-out most of us didn’t receive. When Hasbro introduced the new G.I. Joe Sneak Peek in 1987, the character’s promotional materials stated that his real name was “Owen S. King,” a gesture that may have stemmed from Owen’s dad helping to create another G.I. Joe character.
8. Thriller author Clive Cussler often writes about searches for underwater shipwrecks, and it’s a topic he knows a thing or two about. Cussler founded the non-profit National Underwater & Marine Agency, and together with his NUMA volunteers has located more than 60 historically significant shipwrecks.
9. Jodi Picoult has enjoyed quite a bit of success as a novelist, but she’s also dabbled in comics. In 2007, she wrote a five-issue arc for Wonder Woman.
10. Nicholas Sparks’ works like The Notebook fly off of store shelves, but they might not move as quickly as their author. Sparks not only attended Notre Dame on a track scholarship, he also helped set a still-standing school record in the 4 x 800m relay.
11. Before James Patterson became a bestselling thriller writer, he worked for the advertising firm J. Walter Thompson. He’s also credited with creating the “Toys R Us Kid” slogan.
12. Janet Evanovich’s novels featuring bounty hunter Stephanie Plum have entertained millions of readers, but where did the author get the idea for a female bounty hunter? She apparently decided to have a bounty hunter protagonist after watching Robert De Niro play one in Midnight Run.
13. Tom Clancy isn’t just a techno-thriller novelist; he’s also a part owner of the Baltimore Orioles, for whom he serves as Vice Chairman of Community Activities and Public Affairs. If only Clancy could crank out wins as easily as he does bestsellers.
14. Whatever you think about Dean Koontz’s novels, it’s tough to knock his generosity. Trixie Koontz, the beloved golden retriever in whose name Dean published the book Life is Good: Lessons in Joyful Living was originally a service animal. She came to the Koontz family as gift from Canine Companions for Independence, an organization that trains service dogs, in recognition for Koontz’s donations of over $2.5 million to support the group.
15. Harlan Coben’s chapter of Psi Upsilon at Amherst must boast the greatest combined book sales of any frat ever. Coben’s Myron Bolitar series of detective thrillers has been a bestselling force, and his old fraternity brother Dan Brown knows a thing or two about writing thrillers, too.
More from mental_floss…
The Strange Summer Jobs of 23 Famous People
*
7 Civil War Stories You Didn’t Learn in High School
*
Mistaken Identities and Executions: 6 Murderers Who Didn’t Do It
*
The World’s 10 Messiest Food Festivals
*
Where Are These Thousand Islands? The Origins of 7 Condiments & Sauces
*
Cheetos Lip Balm & Other Bizarre Brand Extensions
Can i post this on my blog? Awesome stuff!
posted by Natalie on 6-23-2009 at 2:41 pm
Really, Danielle Steele and her raping heroin bank robbing husbands with nothing about Salinger? or Brett Easton Ellis? How about Steinbeck or my boy Malcolm Gladwell?!
boo
posted by Ian on 6-23-2009 at 3:59 pm
Salinger and Steinbeck aren’t exactly what you’d call beach read authors…
posted by Lindsey on 6-23-2009 at 5:53 pm
When I heard about 9/11, one of my first thoughts was about a Clancy book I had read, thought the title escapes me, I think it might have been “Debt of Honor”. In it, a sort of lone nut Japanese patriot flies an international airliner into the US Capitol Bldg during the State of the Union address, effectively beheading all 3 branches of the US govt.
But if you want the lighter sports angle, he also tried to buy the Vikings back in 97-98. He had put the Vikings in the Super Bowl…in one of his books (The Sum All Fears). Although, by that logic, he also vaporized the Vikings, as the plot of the book is a nuclear bomb going off at the SB.
posted by Jonny on 6-23-2009 at 7:15 pm
Another interesting fact about Dean Koontz, to quote USA Today:
“The Koontzes have donated millions to CCI, whose Oceanside, Calif., facility is called the Dean, Gerda and Trixie Koontz Campus. The Koontzes, who have no children, have designated CCI the primary beneficiary of their fortune after their deaths.”
posted by Heather on 6-23-2009 at 7:32 pm
To add to this, The Rock Bottom Remainders is a rock band made up of Mitch Albom, Dave Barry, Greg Iles, Roy Blount Jr., Kathy Kamen Goldmark, Stephen King, Matt Groening, James McBride, Amy Tan, Ridley Pearson, and Scott Turow. They play for charity tours and whenever they get sick of writing. They even have a website!
posted by janeeyre316 on 6-24-2009 at 12:40 pm
Stephen King wrote the filecard for Crystal Ball. And if I recall correctly, Sneak Peak was killed off in the G.I. Joe comic book.
posted by Jim on 6-24-2009 at 1:11 pm
Not to mention that Stephen King’s house in Bangor, Me has a really, really cool iron fence around it with
all sorts of creepy cut-outs. Gotta love that guy.
Author Returnable Girl
Spotting for Nellie
(find the new book trailers on Youtube)
posted by Pamela Lowell ya author on 6-24-2009 at 2:13 pm
Hi, Ethan,
thanks for the interesting stuff of success. I’ve linked to your post on my Read, Learn, and Be Happy blog.
Jane
posted by Jane Heitman Healy on 6-24-2009 at 7:23 pm
Anne Perry is a convicted murderer. That’s got to be the most intriguing author fact of all!
posted by Tori on 6-25-2009 at 2:51 am
Aww, Tori beat me to it. Yep, the murder Anne Perry committed (with a pal) was portrayed in the 1994 film “Heavenly Creatures”. Kate Winslet, in her first movie role, played Perry (whose name was something else at the time). Written and directed by Peter and Fran Jackson.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001392/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parker-Hulme_murder
posted by jkate on 6-28-2009 at 2:53 pm
Perry isn’t merely a killer, but a cold-blooded one at that: not only was the weapon of choice a rock to the skull, but 45 times at that (once didn’t kill her apparently). Of course, Perry did have an accomplice, so maybe she only induced as many as 22.5 blows to the head (sorry, I tend to over-react).
posted by John Joachim on 6-29-2009 at 9:25 am