“I've never really had any trouble
coming up with ideas; they just grow, like weeds. The weeding is the hard
part.” –
Stuart Woods
Born in Georgia on Jan. 9, 1938
Woods authored nearly 100 books, including more than 75 featuring his larger-than-life
detective-turned-lawyer-investigator Stone Barrington.
A University of Georgia grad
(majoring in Sociology), he started writing as a journalist then turned to
advertising for many years before moving to England and Ireland to “explore
life, try sailing, and work on a novel.”
Instead he wrote a successful guidebook to country restaurants, inns and
hotels.
After returning to the States he
wrote his first novel, Chief, after finding a police chief’s badge in
his grandmother's home. The badge, which had belonged to his grandfather, was
stained with blood and pockmarked by buckshot.
After further exploring the story behind the badge he wrote the novel
that jumpstarted his creative writing career.
The book, published in 1981, was made into a television series, won him
a “best first novel” award from the Mystery Writers of America, and put him on a
writing path from which he never wavered.
He began his Stone Barrington series with 1991’s New York Dead
and then released several Barrington books a year until his death in 2022.
“I can write anywhere,” he said
about his ability to continually turn out books in the series. “All I need is a couple of hours of solitude
and a computer, and I can write a chapter.”
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