Harold robbins biography
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Harold Robbins summed up his career best in a ITV documentary: "I'm the world's best writer--there's nothing more to say". This phenomenally successful author--over ,, copies of his books were sold worldwide, and most were adapted successfully for the screen. At fifteen, he left home to begin a series of low-paying jobs, including working as a numbers runner. At twenty, after buying options on farmers' produce, Robbins was a millionaire, but a move into sugar futures wiped him out. He next took a job as a shipping clerk with Universal Pictures warehouse in New York and was soon promoted to executive director for budget and planning. On a bet with a studio executive, Robbins wrote his personal favorite novel, Never Love a Stranger (Knopf, ), and other early works which achieved minor critical success. He soon devolved into a writer of more popular novels involving celebrity, sex, and violence, to the scorn of critics. His writings after reflected his pers
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Robbins fiction was as large as his life
<b>Robbins fiction was as large as his life</b> Harold Robbins lived life so large he might have stepped out of one of his own racy paperbacks. He loved gambling, gorgeous women and cocaine; had homes in Beverly Hills, Acapulco and the south of France, plus a legendary yacht and a fleet of Rolls-Royces, Jensens and Maseratis. And then there were his lavish parties some of them X-rated. But Robbins wasnt born to wealth. His background was working class, which meant he knew how to please the public. Instead of putting on literary airs he delivered page-turning storylines and sex, sex, sex. Andrew Wilson, who previously chronicled the life of Patricia Highsmith, has interviewed family, friends and acquaintances, and explored archives and court documents for <b>Harold Robbins: The Man Who Invented Sex</b>, a frank look at the not-always-likable man behind the blockbusters. As Wilson details, elements from Robb
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Harold Robbins
American author
Harold Robbins | |
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Harold Robbins () | |
| Born | Francis Kane[1] ()May 21, New York, New York, U.S. |
| Died | October 14, () (aged81) Palm Springs, California, U.S. |
| Resting place | Forest Lawn Cemetery, Cathedral City, California |
| Occupation | Author |
| Spouse(s) | Lillian Machnivitz (–; divorced) Grace Palermo (–; divorced) Jann Stapp (–, his death) |
Harold Robbins (May 21, – October 14, ) was an American author of popular novels. One of the best-selling writers of all time, he wrote over 25 best-sellers, selling over million copies in 32 languages.
Early life
[edit]Robbins was born Harold Rubin in New York City in , the son of Frances "Fannie" Smith and Charles Rubin. His parents were well-educated Jewish emigrants from the Russian Empire, his father from Odessa and his mother from Neshwies (Nyasvizh), south of Minsk. Robbins later falsely claimed to be a Jewish orphan who had been raise