NEW YORK, Jan. 2, 2009

Mystery Writer Donald Westlake Dies At 75

Edgar Award-Winning Grand Master Was Author Of More Than 100 Books And Screenplays

  • Richard Stark, Tucker Coe, Samuel Holt, Edwin West ... they were all author Donald Westlake (posing here at his Greenwich Village home in 2001), a prolific mystery writer who wrote more than 100 books and scripts under his own names and several pseudonyms. Photo

    Richard Stark, Tucker Coe, Samuel Holt, Edwin West ... they were all author Donald Westlake (posing here at his Greenwich Village home in 2001), a prolific mystery writer who wrote more than 100 books and scripts under his own names and several pseudonyms.  (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)

(CBS/AP)  Donald E. Westlake, a prolific author considered one of the most successful and versatile mystery writers in the United States, has died. He was 75.

Westlake collapsed from an apparent heart attack as he headed to New Year's Eve dinner while vacationing in Mexico, his wife, Abigail, told the New York Times.

In a lengthy career that spanned a half-century, Westlake won three Edgar Awards, an Academy Award nomination for his screenplay "The Grifters" and the title of Grand Master from the Mystery Writers of America in 1993. His first novel, "The Mercenaries," was published by Random House in 1960.

Westlake wrote more than 100 books and screenplays - mostly on a typewriter. A friend of Westlake's, Otto Penzler, told The New York Times, "He hated the idea of an electric typewriter because, he said, ‘I don’t want to sit there while I am thinking and have something hum at me.’”

Aside from his own name, Westlake also used several pseudonyms - including Richard Stark, Tucker Coe, Samuel Holt and Edwin West - in part because people didn't believe he could write so much so quickly.

"In the beginning, people didn't want to publish more than one book a year by the same author," Susan Richman, his publicist at Grand Central Publishing, told the Times.

In recent years, Westlake wrote only under his name and Richard Stark, author of a dark, spare series about a one-named sociopath called Parker.

More than 15 of his books (including "Point Blank," "The Hot Rock," "Cops and Robbers," "Bank Shot," "The Ax" and "Jimmy The Kid") were made into movies. Westlake also penned several screenplays himself, including "The Stepfather" and an adaptation of Jim Thompson's "The Grifters" (directed by Stephen Frears).

Westlake continued to write until he died. His latest novel, "Get Real," is scheduled to be released in April 2009.

Donald Edwin Westlake was born July 12, 1933, in Brooklyn but was raised in Yonkers and Albany. He attended several colleges in New York but did not graduate from any of them.

He married his current wife, Abigail, in 1979, and the couple made their home in Gallatin, New York. He is survived by his wife, four sons from his previous marriage, three stepchildren and four grandchildren.


Visit the author's official Web site.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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by troutfisher4 January 2, 2009 11:07 PM PST
One of my favorites. Thanks for the great books, Don.
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by brundage3 January 2, 2009 11:23 PM PST
When CBS News has no real standards of journalistic writing for us Vp Ed"contributors,,, It is a black mark on CBS.

Please folks. Any persons death deserves more of us than a tactless joke about how the dead man looks like a woman author. More surely than a bad joke and the "joke" apology of "Sorry. I couldn''t help myself."

Is it that the annonymity the internet gives us with our "user name" means we can throw away human caring and just vent away without regard to human respect?
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by lloydbest1 January 3, 2009 12:14 AM PST
So sad!!

I particularly enjoyed the Dortmunder series but also enjoyed many other titles he wrote under his own and other names. Over a career that spanned nearly fifty years he never got stale and of all the books of his I have read (at least two thirds of them) there was only one I didn''t like.
He was an outstanding modern fiction writer and I will second "troutfisher" and send a big "Thank you" for entertaining us for so long.
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