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Leonore Fleischer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American writer

Leonore Fleischer (5 September 1932 – 2009) was an American writer specialising in novelizations of movies. She published over forty novelizations under her own name and a variety of pseudonyms.

Career

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In 1969, Fleischer, then a senior editor at Ballantine Books, was invited to write a novelization of the biker filmC.C. & Company. She accepted due to financial difficulties caused by her recent divorce, and published the book under the pseudonym Mike Roote, concerned that publishing under her own name would cause problems with her employers.

Fleischer went on to publish six novelizations under the name Roote, including the bestselling novelization ofEnter the Dragon.[1] She published a further six under the name Alexander Edwards, as well as several under other pseudonyms, only publishing under her own name once she left her job and began to write freelance full-time.

Fleischer's writing schedule was intense, and she often wrote several novelizations in a year, at one point completing five in thirteen months.[2] Due to this schedule, the short timelines usually expected of tie-in novelizations, and (initially) her full-time job, at times she wrote the books in a matter of days. In the early years of her career they were often completed only with the help of amphetamines.[3]

During the 1970s, at the height of the popularity of the tie-in novelization,[4] Fleischer was called the "den mother of novelizers" bySignature magazine and "the leader of the pack" byNewsweek. Her novelization ofBenji (in 1974, as Allison Thomas) sold over three million copies, and her novelization ofA Star Is Born (in 1976, as Alexander Edwards) over a million. Writing about her process, she said: "I paint by numbers, I confess it. I pad out, supply background, impute motivation, invent gestures. I ride on the coat-tails of somebody else's creation. But work is work and I'm as good as the best of the rest - just ask my agent. Ask the kids who readBenji. AskStephen Sondheim andTony Perkins; I novelizedThe Last of Sheila. They loved my book; I never saw their film. I never see any of the films. I'm lucky if I get to see stills."[5]

In 1985, as the popularity of novelizations decreased, she expressed the belief that the field was dying.[2] However, she continued to write prolifically throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, including novelizations ofAnnie,Rain Man andThe Net, alongside non-fiction books onJoni Mitchell andDolly Parton, and theHearts and Diamonds teen fiction series.

Works

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References

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  1. ^Lines, Craig (19 August 2019)."The Unlikely Story of the Enter The Dragon novelization".Den of Geek. Retrieved22 May 2021.
  2. ^abPoets & Writers, Inc. (1985).The Writing business: a poets & writers handbook. Pushcart Press/W.W. Norton. p. 183.ISBN 0916366278.
  3. ^People Staff (4 April 1977),"If You Liked the Movie, You'll Love the Book by Leonore Fleischer",People, retrieved21 May 2021
  4. ^Jones, J. R. (November 18, 2011)."You've seen the movie—now write the book".The Chicago Reader. RetrievedMay 21, 2021.
  5. ^Fleischer, Leonore (March 13, 1977)."GASP!".The Washington Post. RetrievedMay 21, 2021.
  6. ^Larson, Randall D. (1995).Films into books : an analytical bibliography of film novelizations, movie, and TV tie-ins. The Scarecrow Press, Inc. pp. 492–493.ISBN 0-8108-2928-2.
  7. ^"Leonore Fleischer".Open Library. Internet Archive. Retrieved21 May 2021.
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