p
-
Paulina Porizkova
Film Actress, Television Actress, Author / 1965 -
Paulina Porizkova is a Czechoslovakian model and actress best known for being the first woman from Eastern Europe to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated.
See full bio
(1965-)
Film Actress, Television Actress, Author
-
William Sydney Porter
Author / 1862 - 1910
William Sydney Porter was a prolific short story writer whose work appeared under the name O. Henry.
See full bio
(1862-1910)
Author
-
Chaim Potok
Religious Leader, Editor, Author / 1929 - 2002
Rabbi and author Chaim Potok wrote The Chosen, along with several other novels featuring characters grappling with clashing secular and religious views.
See full bio
(1929-2002)
Religious Leader, Editor, Author
-
Beatrix Potter
Author / 1866 - 1943
British author Beatrix Potter (1866-1943) wrote and illustrated more than 20 children's books starring Peter Rabbit, Jemima Puddle-Duck, and Benjamin Bunny.
See full bio
(1866-1943)
Author
-
E. Annie Proulx
Author / 1935 -
Author E. Annie Proulx won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award in 1993 for her novel The Shipping News.
See full bio
(1935-)
Author
-
Marcel Proust
Author / 1871 - 1922
Marcel Proust is a French author best known for writing the seven part novel In Search of Lost Time, or Remembrance of Things Past.
See full bio
(1871-1922)
Author
-
Manuel Puig
Author, Screenwriter / 1932 - 1990
Manuel Puig was an Argentine writer known for his film scripts and novels, notably Kiss of the Spider Woman.
See full bio
(1932-1990)
Author, Screenwriter
-
Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin
Author, Poet / 1799 - 1837
Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin is a Russian poet an fiction writer who is considered the founder of modern Russian literature.
See full bio
(1799-1837)
Author, Poet
-
Mario Puzo
Author, Screenwriter / 1920 - 1999
Mario Puzo became famous when he adapted his novel The Godfather into a screenplay for director Francis Ford Coppola in the 1960s.
See full bio
(1920-1999)
Author, Screenwriter
-
Howard Pyle
Academic, Illustrator, Author / 1853 - 1911
Howard Pyle was an American illustrator, author and teacher who produced dozens of classic illustrated volumes, including fables, fairy tales and adventure stories.
See full bio
(1853-1911)
Academic, Illustrator, Author
-
Thomas Pynchon
Author / 1937 -
Thomas Pynchon is an award-winning novelist known for works like The Crying of Lot 49 and Gravity's Rainbow.
See full bio
(1937-)
Author
q
-
Anna Quindlen
Journalist, Author / 1952 -
Anna Quindlen is the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and bestselling novelist who wrote the books One True Thing and Object Lessons.
See full bio
(1952-)
Journalist, Author
-
Horacio Quiroga
Journalist, Author / 1878 - 1937
Uruguayan writer Horacio Quiroga penned short stories inspired by the jungle before committing suicide in 1937. Anaconda is considered his greatest work.
See full bio
(1878-1937)
Journalist, Author
r
-
François Rabelais
Doctor, Priest, Author / 1494 - 1553
French writer and physician François Rabelais wrote the comic masterpiece Gargantua and Pantagruel, which is praised for its use of language and satire.
See full bio
(1494-1553)
Doctor, Priest, Author
-
Carl Reiner
Television Actor, Director, Author / 1922 -
Carl Reiner created, wrote and produced The Dick Van Dyke Show. It was based on his experience as a television writer for Your Show of Shows.
See full bio
(1922-)
Television Actor, Director, Author
-
Anne Rice
Author / 1941 -
Anne Rice wrote supernatural novels. Her most famous series was Vampire Chronicles, which included the book Interview with the Vampire.
See full bio
(1941-)
Author
-
Rainer Maria Rilke
Author, Poet / 1875 - 1926
Bohemian-Austrian poet Ranier Maria Rilke is considered one of the most significant poets in the German language and is best known for his work Duino Elegies.
See full bio
(1875-1926)
Author, Poet
-
Faith Ringgold
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Painter, Author / 1930 -
Faith Ringgold is an American artist and author who became famous for innovative, quilted narrations like Tar Beach that communicate her political beliefs.
See full bio
(1930-)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Painter, Author
-
Augusto Roa Bastos
Author / 1917 - 2005
Paraguayan author Augusto Roa Bastos received the Premio Cervantes prize in 1989 for books like I, the Supreme (1947).
See full bio
(1917-2005)
Author
-
Adela Rogers St. Johns
Journalist, Author, Screenwriter / 1894 - 1988
Journalist Adela Rogers St. Johns was a reporter for Hearst newspapers, and was best known for her interviews of motion picture stars.
See full bio
(1894-1988)
Journalist, Author, Screenwriter
-
Philip Roth
Academic, Author / 1933 -
American novelist and short-story writer Philip Roth is best known for his provocative explorations of Jewish and American identity.
See full bio
(1933-)
Academic, Author
-
J.K. Rowling
Author / 1965 -
J.K. Rowling is the creator of the Harry Potter fantasy series, one of the most popular book and film franchises in history.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1965-)
Author
-
Juan Rulfo
Author / 1918 - 1986
Mexican writer John Rulfo is considered one of the finest novelists and short-story creators in 20th-century Latin America.
See full bio
(1918-1986)
Author
-
Salman Rushdie
Author / 1947 -
Salman Rushdie is a British-Indian novelist best known for the novels Midnight's Children (1981) and The Satanic Verses (1988), for which he was accused of blasphemy against Islam.
See full bio
(1947-)
Author
s
-
Vita Sackville-West
Author, Poet / 1892 - 1962
Vita Sackville-West was a novelist and poet known for works such as The Land and All Passion Spent.
See full bio
(1892-1962)
Author, Poet
-
William Safire
Journalist, Author / 1929 - 2009
William Safire was a writer whose column "On Language" was a long-running feature of the New York Times Magazine.
See full bio
(1929-2009)
Journalist, Author
-
Françoise Sagan
Author / 1935 - 2004
Author Françoise Sagan published the novel Bonjour Tristesse in 1954 at the young age of 19. It was an international bestseller.
See full bio
(1935-2004)
Author
-
J.D. Salinger
Author / 1919 - 2010
With his landmark novel Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger was an influential 20th-century American writer.
See full bio
(1919-2010)
Author
-
George Sand
Author / 1804 - 1876
French author Amandine Aaurore Lucile Dudevant wrote many popular novels during the Romantic period under the pseudonym George
Sand.
See full bio
(1804-1876)
Author
-
Carl Sandburg
Journalist, Author, Poet / 1878 - 1967
American poet Carl Sandburg was also a folklorist, novelist and historian. He won a Pulitzer Prize for the book Abraham Lincoln: The War Years.
See full bio
(1878-1967)
Journalist, Author, Poet
-
José Saramago
Journalist, Author / 1922 - 2010
José Saramago was a Portuguese novelist and man of letters who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1998.
See full bio
(1922-2010)
Journalist, Author
-
May Sarton
Journalist, Author, Poet / 1912 - 1995
May Sarton was a writer of poetry, novels and memoirs including her Journal of a Solitude.
See full bio
(1912-1995)
Journalist, Author, Poet
-
Jean-Paul Sartre
Philosopher, Activist, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Journalist, Author, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1905 - 1980
Jean-Paul Sartre was a 20th century intellectual, writer and activist who put forth pioneering ideas on existentialism.
See full bio
(1905-1980)
Philosopher, Activist, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Journalist, Author, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Dorothy L Sayers
Scholar, Author / 1893 - 1957
Dorothy Sayers was a writer whose later efforts focused on theological dramas and books, radio plays and scholarly translations.
See full bio
(1893-1957)
Scholar, Author
-
Alice Sebold
Educator, Author, Poet / 1963 -
Alice Sebold is an American writer and best-selling author of the book, The Lovely Bones, which has been hailed the most successful debut novel since Gone with the Wind.
See full bio
(1963-)
Educator, Author, Poet
-
Hubert Selby Jr.
Academic, Author, Screenwriter / 1928 - 2004
Hubert Selby, Jr. was a writer from Brooklyn, NY, who wrote the novels Last Exit to Brooklyn and Requiem for a Dream, both of which were adapted into films.
See full bio
(1928-2004)
Academic, Author, Screenwriter
-
Maurice Sendak
Illustrator, Author / 1928 - 2012
Maurice Sendak is a Caldecott award-winning children's book author and illustrator best known for his book Where the Wild Things Are.
See full bio
(1928-2012)
Illustrator, Author
-
Rod Serling
Anti-War Activist, Television Personality, Author, Screenwriter / 1924 - 1975
Emmy Award–winning television and film writer Rod Serling created and hosted the sci-fi fantasy series The Twilight Zone and co-wrote Planet of the Apes.
See full bio
(1924-1975)
Anti-War Activist, Television Personality, Author, Screenwriter
-
Dr. Seuss
Illustrator, Author / 1904 - 1991
Throughout his career, cartoonist and writer Dr. Seuss published 60 children's books, including The Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1904-1991)
Illustrator, Author
-
Anna Sewell
Author / 1820 - 1878
Anna Sewell was the British author of the classic children's horse story Black Beauty.
See full bio
(1820-1878)
Author
-
George Bernard Shaw
Author, Playwright / 1856 - 1950
Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw wrote more than 60 plays during his lifetime, which earned him a Nobel Prize in Literature in 1925.
See full bio
(1856-1950)
Author, Playwright
-
Sidney Sheldon
Author, Screenwriter / 1917 - 2007
Sidney Sheldon was a best-selling novelist who won Oscar, Tony and Emmy awards for his work on the stage and screen.
See full bio
(1917-2007)
Author, Screenwriter
-
Mary Shelley
Author / 1797 - 1851
English writer Mary Shelley is best known for her horror novel Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus (1818). She was married to poet Percy Bysshe Shelley.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1797-1851)
Author
-
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1792 - 1822
Known for his lyrical and long-form verse, Percy Bysshe Shelley is one of the most highly regarded English Romantic poets of the 19th century. His works include The Masque of Anarchy and Queen Mab.
See full bio
(1792-1822)
Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Sam Shepard
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor, Director, Author, Playwright / 1943 -
Sam Shepard is a prolific, Oscar-nominated actor and playwright who’s won the Pulitzer Prize.
See full bio
(1943-)
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor, Director, Author, Playwright
-
Su Shi
Painter, Medical Professional, Political Leader, Author, Poet / 1037 - 1101
Born in 1037, Su Shi is one of China's greatest poets and essayists of the Song era.
See full bio
(1037-1101)
Painter, Medical Professional, Political Leader, Author, Poet
-
Shel Silverstein
Illustrator, Songwriter, Author, Poet / 1930 - 1999
Shel Silverstein was a poet and musician known for children’s books such as The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends.
See full bio
(1930-1999)
Illustrator, Songwriter, Author, Poet
-
Claude Simon
Author / 1913 - 2005
French novelist Claude Simon’s novels include The Wind; The Grass; and The Flanders Road. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1985.
See full bio
(1913-2005)
Author
-
Mona Simpson
Author / 1957 -
Born in 1957, Mona Simpson spent her early years in Green Bay, Wisconsin. She moved with her mother to Los Angeles as a teenager. While earning her M.F.A. degree at Columbia, Simpson became an editor at the Paris Review. She won accolades for her first novel Anywhere But Here (1986). After that initial success, Simpson has continued to produce well-regarded literary works, including My Hollywood (2010).
See full bio
(1957-)
Author
-
Upton Sinclair
Activist, Journalist, Author / 1878 - 1968
Upton Sinclair was an activist writer whose works often uncovered social injustices, such as in The Jungle and Boston.
See full bio
(1878-1968)
Activist, Journalist, Author
-
Isaac Bashevis Singer
Author / 1904 - 1991
Isaac Bashevis Singer was a Jewish-American writer who won the 1978 Nobel Prize in Literature.
See full bio
(1904-1991)
Author
-
Zadie Smith
Journalist, Author / 1975 -
Zadie Smith is a novelist whose first book, White Teeth, was a sensation, instantly putting her on the literary map.
See full bio
(1975-)
Journalist, Author
-
Lemony Snicket
Author / 1970 -
Writer Lemony Snicket became well-known for his series of children's novels, A Series of Unfortunate Events, featuring the Baudelaire siblings.
See full bio
(1970-)
Author
-
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Educator, Activist, Journalist, Author / 1918 - 2008
Alexander Solzhenitsyn was a Russian novelist and historian, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1970.
See full bio
(1918-2008)
Educator, Activist, Journalist, Author
-
Muriel Spark
Literary Critic, Academic Author, Publisher, Author, Poet / 1918 - 2006
Dame Muriel Spark was a Scottish novelist, poet and literary critic best known for her novel The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.
See full bio
(1918-2006)
Literary Critic, Academic Author, Publisher, Author, Poet
-
Nicholas Sparks
Author / 1965 -
Nicholas Sparks is the author of novels The Notebook, Message in a Bottle and Nights in Rodanthe, among others.
See full bio
(1965-)
Author
-
Mickey Spillane
Author / 1918 - 2006
Mickey Spillane was an American writer of mysteries and pulp fiction. His most famous creation was hard-boiled detective, Mike Hammer.
See full bio
(1918-2006)
Author
-
Erle Stanley Gardner
Lawyer, Author / 1889 - 1970
Erle Stanley Gardner was a U.S. detective novelist who wrote The Case of the Velvet Claws and other novels featuring the lawyer-detective Perry Mason.
See full bio
(1889-1970)
Lawyer, Author
-
William Thomas Stead
Journalist, Author / 1849 - 1912
William Thomas Stead was a writer of journalistic pieces and ghost stories whose life came to an end on the Titanic.
See full bio
(1849-1912)
Journalist, Author
-
Gertrude Stein
Art Collector, Publisher, Journalist, Author, Poet / 1874 - 1946
Gertrude Stein was an American author and poet best known for her modernist writings, extensive art collecting and literary salon in 1920s Paris.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1874-1946)
Art Collector, Publisher, Journalist, Author, Poet
-
John Steinbeck
Author / 1902 - 1968
John Steinbeck was a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist whose book The Grapes of Wrath portrayed the plight of migrant workers during the Depression.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1902-1968)
Author
-
Robert Louis Stevenson
Author / 1850 - 1894
Robert Louis Stevenson was a 19th century Scottish writer notable for such novels as Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
See full bio
(1850-1894)
Author
-
R.L. Stine
Author / 1943 -
Author R.L. Stine is famous for writing Goosebumps, the best-selling horror series for kids. He also created the successful Fear Street series.
See full bio
(1943-)
Author
-
Bram Stoker
Author / 1847 - 1912
Irish writer Bram Stoker is best known for authoring the classic horror novel Dracula (1897).
See full bio
| Watch video
(1847-1912)
Author
-
Robert Stone
Journalist, Author / 1937 -
Brooklyn-born novelist Robert Stone is the author of numerous novels, best known for his dark humor and political commentary.
See full bio
(1937-)
Journalist, Author
-
Tom Stoppard
Author, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1937 -
Sir Tom Stoppard is a Czech-born British playwright whose famous works include Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1964) and Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (1978). He co-wrote the screenplay for the 1998 Academy Award winning film Shakespeare in Love.
See full bio
(1937-)
Author, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Rex Stout
Author / 1886 - 1975
Rex Stout was an American crime writer best known as the man who brought the world the fictional New York City detective Nero Wolfe.
See full bio
(1886-1975)
Author
-
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Activist, Philanthropist, Author / 1811 - 1896
Harriet Beecher Stowe was an author and social activist best known for her popular anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
See full bio
(1811-1896)
Activist, Philanthropist, Author
-
William Styron
Author / 1925 - 2006
Novelist William Styron won a Pulitzer Prize for The Confessions of Nat Turner and wrote Sophie’s Choice, the basis of an Academy Award-winning film.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1925-2006)
Author
t
-
Rabindranath Tagore
Painter, Author, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter
Rabindranath Tagore was a Bengali poet, novelist and painter best known for being the first non-European to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913.
See full bio
Painter, Author, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter
-
Amy Tan
Author / 1952 -
Amy Tan is a Chinese-American novelist who wrote the New York Times-bestselling novel The Joy Luck Club.
See full bio
(1952-)
Author
-
Elizabeth Coles Taylor
Author / 1912 - 1975
Elizabeth Coles Taylor was a popular English novelist who portrays with flawless accuracy the behavior of women during her time.
See full bio
(1912-1975)
Author
-
William Makepeace Thackeray
Author / 1811 - 1863
William Makepeace Thackeray was a 19th-century novelist known for such works as Vanity Fair and Barry Lyndon.
See full bio
(1811-1863)
Author
-
Hunter S. Thompson
Activist, Journalist, Author / 1937 - 2005
A counterculture icon, Hunter S. Thompson was an American journalist best known for writing 1971's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and creating "Gonzo journalism."
See full bio
| Watch video
(1937-2005)
Activist, Journalist, Author
-
James Thurber
Illustrator, Author / 1894 - 1961
James Thurber was an American cartoonist best known for his contributions to The New Yorker magazine.
See full bio
(1894-1961)
Illustrator, Author
-
Wallace Henry Thurman
Literary Critic, Editor, Author, Playwright / 1902 - 1934
Wallace Henry Thurman was an African-American literary figure associated with the Harlem Renaissance.
See full bio
(1902-1934)
Literary Critic, Editor, Author, Playwright
-
J.R.R. Tolkien
Linguist, Author / 1892 - 1973
J.R.R. Tolkien is an internationally renowned fantasy writer. He is best known for authoring The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
See full bio
(1892-1973)
Linguist, Author
-
Leo Tolstoy
Author / 1828 - 1910
Russian author Leo Tolstoy wrote the acclaimed novels War and Peace, Anna Karenina and The Death of Ivan Ilyich, and still ranks among the world's top writers.
See full bio
(1828-1910)
Author
-
Jean Toomer
Author, Playwright / 1894 - 1967
Poet, novelist and short-story writer Jean Toomer was a major figure during the Harlem Renaissance. He is best known for his first book, Cane.
See full bio
(1894-1967)
Author, Playwright
-
Dalton Trumbo
Anti-War Activist, Director, Author, Screenwriter / 1905 - 1976
Dalton Trumbo was an Academy Award-winning screenwriter and novelist who was blacklisted during the McCarthy era and forced to work under various pseudonyms.
See full bio
(1905-1976)
Anti-War Activist, Director, Author, Screenwriter
-
Anne Tyler
Editor, Author / 1941 -
Anne Tyler is an American novelist best known for writing The Accidental Tourist (1985) which was made into a movie in 1988 starring William Hurt and Geena Davis.
See full bio
(1941-)
Editor, Author
-
Colm Tóibín
Journalist, Author / 1955 -
Irish author Colm Tóibín is famous for literary works about Irish society, creativity and homosexuality. His most popular novels include The Blackwater Lightship and The Master.
See full bio
(1955-)
Journalist, Author
u
-
John Updike
Author / 1932 - 2009
Writer John Updike's works are known for their subtle depiction of American middle-class life. His popular Rabbit series earned him two Pulitzer prizes.
See full bio
(1932-2009)
Author
v
-
Jules Verne
Author / 1828 - 1905
Jules Verne was a 19th-century French author whose revolutionary science-fiction novels—such as Around the World in Eighty Days and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea—have entranced readers for over a century.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1828-1905)
Author
-
Gore Vidal
Critic, Author, Playwright / 1925 - 2012
Gore Vidal was best known as a prolific American writer, but was also famous for frequent talk-show appearances and witty political criticisms.
See full bio
(1925-2012)
Critic, Author, Playwright
-
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1749 - 1832
Poet, novelist, and playwright Johann Wolfgang von Goethe provided the Sturm und Drang movement with its first novel, The Sorrows of Young Werther.
See full bio
(1749-1832)
Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Kurt Vonnegut
Author / 1922 - 2007
Kurt Vonnegut was an American author best known for the novels Cat's Cradle, Slaughterhouse-Five and Breakfast of Champions.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1922-2007)
Author
w
-
Alice Walker
Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Author / 1944 -
Alice Walker is a Pulitzer Prize-winning, African-American novelist and poet most famous for authoring The Color Purple.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1944-)
Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Author
-
Kath Walker
Activist, Journalist, Author, Poet / 1920 - 1993
Australian Aboriginal writer and political activist Kath Walker is considered the first of the modern-day Aboriginal protest writers.
See full bio
(1920-1993)
Activist, Journalist, Author, Poet
-
Margaret Walker
Author, Poet / 1915 - 1998
Margaret Walker is best known for writing on the African-American experience through fiction and poetry.
See full bio
(1915-1998)
Author, Poet
-
David Foster Wallace
Journalist, Author / 1962 - 2008
David Foster Wallace was a writer known for his dense short stories, magazine articles and novels, most notably the 1,200-page Infinite Jest.
See full bio
(1962-2008)
Journalist, Author
-
Evelyn Waugh
Educator, Artist, Journalist, Author / 1903 - 1966
English writer Evelyn Waugh is regarded by many as the most brilliant satirical novelist of his day. His works include The Loved One and Brideshead Revisited.
See full bio
(1903-1966)
Educator, Artist, Journalist, Author
-
H.G. Wells
Author / 1866 - 1946
H.G. Wells was a writer of science-fiction works—including The Time Machine and War of the Worlds—who had a great influence on our vision of the future.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1866-1946)
Author
-
Eudora Welty
Photographer, Journalist, Author / 1909 - 2001
Short-story writer and novelist Eudora Welty’s work focuses on the regional manners of people inhabiting a small Mississippi town that resembles her birthplace.
See full bio
(1909-2001)
Photographer, Journalist, Author
-
Dorothy West
Editor, Author / 1907 - 1998
Dorothy West is a writer remembered for her sharp observations of varied issues within the African American community.
See full bio
(1907-1998)
Editor, Author
-
Edith Wharton
Author / 1862 - 1937
Novelist Edith Wharton was born to an old New York family, but is better known for her books Ethan Frome and The Age of Innocence.
See full bio
(1862-1937)
Author
-
T.H. White
Journalist, Author / 1906 - 1964
T.H. White was an English writer known for his novel series about King Arthur, The Once and Future King.
See full bio
(1906-1964)
Journalist, Author
-
Gene Wilder
Actor, Comedian, Author / 1933 -
Actor Gene Wilder became a children's hero as the star of Mel Brook's film adaptation of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1933-)
Actor, Comedian, Author
-
Laura Ingalls Wilder
Educator, Journalist, Author / 1867 - 1957
Pioneer author Laura Ingalls Wilder wrote the autobiographical “Little House” kids’ book series, the basis of the popular television show Little House on the Prairie.
See full bio
(1867-1957)
Educator, Journalist, Author
-
Thornton Wilder
Author, Playwright / 1897 - 1975
Thornton Wilder is a multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and playwright known for works like The Bridge of San Luis Rey, The Ides of March and Our Town.
See full bio
(1897-1975)
Author, Playwright