Misplaced Pages

Anthony Horowitz: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 14:58, 28 September 2005 edit86.41.141.153 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 15:39, 28 September 2005 edit undoAngmering (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers19,665 editsm External Links: section title and added IMDb linkNext edit →
Line 15: Line 15:
His series ''The Diamond Brothers'' is aimed at slightly younger children than the Alex Rider books and consists of: ''The Falcon Malteser'', ''Public Enemy Number Two'' and ''South by South East''. His series ''The Diamond Brothers'' is aimed at slightly younger children than the Alex Rider books and consists of: ''The Falcon Malteser'', ''Public Enemy Number Two'' and ''South by South East''.


==External Links== ==External links==
*

*{{contemporary writers|id=C2D9C28B0c54814C0EjOi13934DB}}
* at the ]

{{contemporary writers|id=C2D9C28B0c54814C0EjOi13934DB}}





Revision as of 15:39, 28 September 2005

Alex Rider by Anthony Horowitz
Novels
Adaptations
Characters

Anthony Horowitz (born April 5, 1955) is a British author and television scriptwriter. His most successful work has included creating and writing the series Foyle's War for ITV and writing several episodes of another ITV series, Midsomer Murders. Both of these are detective murder mystery series. He is also the author of the highly successful Alex Rider series of adventure novels for children.

He began writing for television in the 1980s, contributing to Granada Television's anthology series Dramarama, and also writing for the popular fantasy series Robin of Sherwood. His association with murder mysteries began with the adaptation of several Hercule Poirot stories for ITV's popular Agatha Christie's Poirot series during the 1990s.

Often his work has a comic edge, such as with the comic murder anthology Murder Most Horrid (BBC Two, 1991), the comedy-drama The Last Englishman (1995), starring Jim Broadbent, and his 2004 book, The Killing Joke. In 2001 he created a drama anthology series of his own for the BBC, Murder in Mind, an occasional series which deals with a different set of characters and a different murder every one-hour episode.

He is also less-favourably known for the creation of two short-lived and generally derided science-fiction shows, Crime Traveller (1997) for BBC One and The Vanishing Man (pilot 1996, series 1998) for ITV. The successful launch of the Second World War-set detective series Foyle's War in 2002 helped to restore his reputation as one of Britain's foremost writers of popular drama.

He is also the writer of a feature film screenplay, The Gathering, which was released in 2002 and starred Christina Ricci.

Anthony Horowitz also writes the Alex Rider books, which are about a 14-year old boy becoming a spy. Currently, there are 6 Alex Rider books (Stormbreaker, Point Blanc, Skeleton Key, Eagle Strike, Scorpia and Ark Angel). The 6th book, Ark Angel, was released on April 1, 2005, and Stormbreaker is currently being adapted into a feature film, with a screenplay by Horowitz.

His series The Diamond Brothers is aimed at slightly younger children than the Alex Rider books and consists of: The Falcon Malteser, Public Enemy Number Two and South by South East.

External links

Categories: