Janet Evanovich

Writer

Birthday April 22, 1943

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace South River, New Jersey, U.S.

Age 81 years old

Nationality United States

#41444 Most Popular

1943

Janet Evanovich (née Schneider; April 22, 1943) is an American writer.

She began her career writing short contemporary romance novels under the pen name Steffie Hall, but gained fame authoring a series of contemporary mysteries featuring Stephanie Plum, a former lingerie buyer from Trenton, New Jersey, who becomes a bounty hunter to make ends meet after losing her job.

The novels in this series have been on The New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal and Amazon bestseller lists.

Evanovich has had her last seventeen Plums debut at #1 on the NY Times Best Sellers list and eleven of them have hit #1 on USA Today Best-Selling Books list.

She has over two hundred million books in print worldwide, and her books have been translated into over 40 languages.

Evanovich is a second-generation American born in South River, New Jersey, to a machinist and a housewife.

After attending South River High School, she became the first in her family to attend college when she enrolled at Douglass College, part of Rutgers University, to study art.

When Evanovich had children, she chose to become a housewife like her mother.

In her thirties, she began writing novels.

To learn the art of writing dialog, Evanovich took lessons in improv acting.

For ten years, she attempted to write the Great American Novel, finishing three manuscripts that she was unable to sell.

After someone suggested she try writing romance novels, Evanovich read several romances and discovered that she enjoyed the genre.

She wrote two romances and submitted them for publishing.

Still unable to find a publisher, Evanovich stopped writing and signed with a temporary employment agency.

Several months after beginning work for them, she received an offer to buy her second romance manuscript for $2,000, which she considered an "astounding sum".

1987

That novel, Hero at Large, was published in 1987 in the Second Chance Love category line under the pseudonym Steffie Hall.

The following year she began writing for Bantam Loveswept under her own name.

For the next five years she continued to write category romances for Loveswept.

Her work within the romance novel genre helped her learn to create likable characters and attractive leading men.

In this time, Evanovich also became known for the humor that filled her novels.

She believes that "it's very important to take a comic approach. If we can laugh at something, we can face it."

After finishing her twelfth romance, however, Evanovich realized that she was more interested in writing the action sequences in her novels than the sex scenes.

Her editors were not interested in her change of heart, so Evanovich took the next eighteen months to formulate a plan for what she actually wanted to write.

She quickly decided that she wanted to write romantic adventure novels.

She wanted to include humor, romance and adventure in her work and this fit into her style of mystery novel.

Unlike the style of romance novels, her books would be told in first person narrative.

Her new type of writing should contain heroes and heroines, as well as "a sense of family and community".

In that vein, she intended her new style of writing to be based on the TV sitcom model.

Like Seinfeld, her new books would have a central character that the rest of the cast of characters revolve around.

Inspired by the Robert De Niro movie Midnight Run, Evanovich decided that her heroine would be a bounty hunter.

This occupation provided more freedom for Evanovich as a writer, as bounty hunters do not have a set work schedule and are not forced to wear a uniform.

The profession is also "romanticised to some extent".

To become acquainted with the demands of the career, Evanovich spent a great deal of time shadowing bond enforcement agents.

She also researched more about the city of Trenton, where she wanted her books to be set.

1994

In 1994, her initial romantic adventure, One for the Money, was published to good reviews.

This was the first of a light-hearted series of mysteries starring barely competent bounty hunter Stephanie Plum.

One for the Money was named a New York Times notable book, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 1994 and a USA Today Best Bet.

Evanovich has continued to write romantic adventures starring Plum.

The sixth book in the series, Hot Six, was the first of her novels to reach number one on the New York Times Best Seller List.

Her subsequent Plum novels have each debuted at number one.