John Reynolds Gardiner Explained

John Reynolds Gardiner
Birth Date:December 6, 1944
Birth Place:Los Angeles, California
Death Date:March 4, 2006 (aged 61)
Death Place:Anaheim, California
Occupation:Novelist,
Nationality:American
Alma Mater:UCLA
Genre:Children's books

John Reynolds Gardiner (December 6, 1944 – March 4, 2006) was an American writer best known for writing the book Stone Fox.

Personal life

Born in Los Angeles, California, he was a rebellious boy whose teachers believed he would never get anywhere in life. He earned his master's degree from University of California, Los Angeles. He was an engineer before working on his first and best-known children's book, Stone Fox, which, at the time of his death in 2006, had sold four million copies.[1] Always creative, in his younger years he ran Num Num Novelties, home to such originals as the aquarium tie. He lived in West Germany, El Salvador, Mexico, Italy, Ireland, and Idaho where he heard a local legend that inspired Stone Fox. He took a special class on screenplay and wrote Stone Fox as a movie, but a producer told him to publish it into a novel. Gardiner also edited children's stories for television. He lived out his final years with his wife, Gloria, in California and died of complications from pancreatitis in Anaheim, California.

Works

Novels
Filmography

Notes and References

  1. News: John Reynolds Gardiner, 61, Author of Children's Books (obituary). Brozan, Nadine. The New York Times. March 19, 2006. June 7, 2010.