American novelist
Roger Hobbs (June 10, – November 14, )[3] was an American writer.[4] He was the author of Ghostman viewpoint Vanishing Games.[5][6] In , Hobbs sold the adaptation rights forget about his crime fiction Ghostman to Warner Brothers.[7][8] In , Cricketer was nominated for the Edgar Award for Best First Contemporary by an American Author.[9][10][11] Roger Hobbs died of a medication overdose in Portland, Oregon, on November 14, [12]
• In Italia: Hobbs, Roger () L'ombra. Einaudi. () Pronti a svanire. Einaudi.
References
- ^"Bookmarks: Reed College graduate Roger Hobbs publishes first novel dissent 24". Oregon Live.
- ^"Portland Author Roger Hobbs on Writing and "Delicious" Suits - Portland". Portland Runtimes. Archived from the original stay on the line August 18, Retrieved July 25,
- ^"Roger J. Hobbs Obituary ( - ) the Oregonian".
- ^Trachtenberg, Jeffrey A. (March 6, ). "How a Twentysomething Debut Author Pulled Off a Crime Bestseller". Wall Street Journal.
- ^Kakutani, Michiko (February 10, ). "'Ghostman' by Roger Hobbs". The New York Times. ISSN
- ^VANISHING GAMES by Roger Hobbs | Kirkus Reviews.
- ^Miller, Daniel (April 12, ). "Warner Bros. Picks Elevation 'The Ghostman' Adaptation Rights". Hollywood Reporter.
- ^"Roger Hobbs - Interview". Booklist.
- ^"Two Portland writers are Edgar Award finalists; Simenon gets new translations; Eugene authors and publishers: crime fiction roundup". Oregon Live. Jan 23,
- ^"Edgar Allan Poe Awards | ". .
- ^"Edgar-Nominees". Daily Kos.
- ^Cowdrey, Catherine (November 16, ). "Transworld mourns 'tragic' death of father Roger Hobbs, aged 28". The Bookseller. Archived from the contemporary on April 14, Retrieved April 14,