
"I'd love to hear from you, and hope you will share your questions and thoughts about the series. Write to me with your suggestions for our "What's New" section, or any ideas and comments."
What's a nice woman like Leslie Glass doing behind a Detective's desk in a gritty New York City Police precinct? Research!
Acclaimed for crime novels that vibrate with chilling psychological suspense, best-selling author Leslie Glass knows police work from the inside-out. When she's not working on her next book, you might find her at the police firing range at Rodman's Neck. Her intensive research on the front lines has given Glass an intimate knowledge of the twists and turns, procedures and pitfalls of criminal investigation. Her first-hand experience of the day-to-day realities of police work also has given her special insight into the politics, heartaches and conflicts of a New York City cop's life.
As she hung out with police, heard their gripes, went out on calls, and witnessed the difficulties they faced every day, her concern for their welfare became a civic duty for Glass. As a Trustee of the New York City Police Foundation, she works to improve the quality of life, training and safety for police officers as well as serving on the Crime Stoppers Award Committee. The result of her dedication is more than just compelling fiction, page-turning plots, and unforgettable characters: it is a special dose of reality, a slap in the face, a gruesome autopsy scene that says to the reader: this really happened -- Leslie Glass has been there.
Her latest novel starring April Woo, A Clean Kill, hit shelves as an original paperback in June 2005. Leslie’s recent departures from the April Woo series include For Love and Money (2004), a novel of stocks and robbers and Over His Dead Body (2003). For more information on these books, see Leslie's other web site at www.authorleslieglass.com. In the April Woo series, A Killing Gift was published in 2003, and The Silent Bride in 2002. Tracking Time, available as a Signet paperback, was first released in hardcover in October of 2000. Her previous Dutton hardcover, Stealing Time (1999), was issued as the Signet lead paperback in February 2000. The four previous releases in her now famous suspense series: Burning Time (1993), Hanging Time (1995), Loving Time (1996), and Judging Time (1998) are still available in paperback. Glass's first crime novel about a kidnapping, To Do No Harm, was released in 1990.
People often ask how Leslie
Glass, a non-Chinese who grew up in the Bronx, Martha's Vineyard and New York
City, came to write about a Asian American female cop from Queens, but it
seems perfectly natural to Glass: "A Chinese couple lived with my family,
and I grew up in a Chinese kitchen. It was like having two sets of parents,"
she says. "And my Chinese parents definitely ruled the roost."
In addition to her passions for law enforcement, the diversity of American culture, and the Asian-American experience, Glass is also fascinated by psychology. This interest has translated into another main character in her series: psychiatrist Dr. Jason Frank. "I've always been interested in people's motivations for their actions, and the effect therapy has on their lives," she says. "I created Jason Frank to show how a psychiatrist would approach suspects, and crime, as a counterpoint to the law enforcement strategies used by the police."
She is the founder of the Leslie Glass Foundation, which grants graduate research fellowships in the fields of criminal justice and mental health. Glass is also the Program Chair for the New York City chapter of Mystery Writers of America.
Before embarking on a life in crime, Glass wrote in many formats. At New York Magazine she wrote and edited the "Intelligencer" column for the first year of its existence. She has been a frequent contributor of both features and fiction to Cosmopolitan, and her short stories have appeared in Redbook and Women's Own, (Great Britain), and have been widely translated abroad.
In 1976 Doubleday published her first novel, Getting Away With It. Avon followed with the paperback in 1977, which was a Book-of-the-Month Club Alternate. Next came Modern Love published by St. Martins Press (hardcover-1983; paperback-1984) which was optioned for a feature film and translated in six foreign languages.
Glass also has several credits as a playwright. Strokes (1984), was first produced by the American Repertory Theatre in Boston and was rated one on the ten best theatrical events of the year by the Boston Globe. She has also written one-act plays to help people deal with social issues: The Survivors was commissioned by the W.T. Grant Foundation for the prevention of teenage suicide and premiered in 1989. It is produced in high schools and community centers around the country. On The Edge, was commissioned by the Junior League of New York to help inner city youth deal with the violence in their lives. It premiered in 1991 at Lincoln Center as part of the Mayor's tribute to the United Nations conference on children.
For Leslie Glass, writing
is her life. Her philanthropy and other not-for-profit activities have naturally
evolved from her deep involvement in the subjects she writes about. "My
research and writing open the door to another world, and I just step through."
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