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Edwin Corley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edwin Raymond Corley (born 2 October 1931 in Bayonne, New Jersey – died 7 November 1981 in Gulfport, Mississippi) was a United States novelist most famous for his thrillers Sargasso, Air Force One, and The Jesus Factor. He used the pseudonyms "David Harper", "William Judson", and "Will Collins" and worked with novelist Jack Murphy, using the pseudonym "Patrick Buchanan" (unrelated to Patrick Buchanan, the politician of the same name).

As "Patrick Buchanan", Corley and Murphy wrote a series of novels (A Murder of Crows, 1970; A Parliament of Owls, 1971; A Requiem of Sharks, 1973; and A Sounder of Swine, 1974) featuring the character Charity Tucker, a tall, blonde, intelligent television reporter, who teamed with private investigator Ben Shock to investigate various murders.[1]

Corley's Hollywood-centered and partly factual novel, Shadows (1975), was the first work of fiction to feature Dorothy Parker appearing as herself. Other major characters are William Randolph Hearst, his paramour Marion Davies, and Vivien Leigh.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Barnett, Colleen (3rd ed. 2006). Mystery Women: An Encyclopedia of Leading Women Characters in Mystery Fiction Volume 1: 1860–1979, unpaginated. Poison Pen Press.
  2. ^ Kinner, Arthur F. "The Other Dorothy Parkers". In Pettit, Rhonda S., ed. (2005). The Critical Waltz: Essays on the Work of Dorothy Parker, pp. 119-21. Associated University Presses.
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