Trevanian

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Trevanian


Born
in Granville, New York, The United States
June 12, 1931

Died
December 14, 2005

Website

Genre


Rodney William Whitaker was an American film scholar and writer who wrote several novels under the pen name Trevanian. Whitaker wrote in a wide variety of genres, achieved bestseller status, and published under several other names, as well, including Nicholas Seare, Beñat Le Cagot, and Edoard Moran. He published the nonfiction book The Language of Film under his own name.
Between 1972 and 1983, five of his novels sold more than a million copies each. He was described as "the only writer of airport paperbacks to be compared to Émile Zola, Ian Fleming, Edgar Allan Poe, and Geoffrey Chaucer." Whitaker adamantly avoided publicity for most of his life, his real name a closely held secret for many years. The 1980 reference book Twentieth-Cent
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Average rating: 4.05 · 46,468 ratings · 2,810 reviews · 38 distinct worksSimilar authors
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The Summer of Katya

4.01 avg rating — 4,163 ratings — published 1983 — 51 editions
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The Crazyladies of Pearl St...

3.71 avg rating — 3,489 ratings — published 2005 — 2 editions
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The Loo Sanction (Jonathan ...

3.82 avg rating — 2,468 ratings — published 1973 — 2 editions
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The Main

3.86 avg rating — 1,533 ratings — published 1976 — 5 editions
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Incident at Twenty-Mile

3.80 avg rating — 1,173 ratings — published 1998 — 15 editions
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Hot Night in the City

3.63 avg rating — 440 ratings — published 2000 — 4 editions
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Trevanian: Four Complete No...

4.38 avg rating — 148 ratings — published 1984 — 7 editions
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Death Dance: Suspenseful St...

3.62 avg rating — 127 ratings — published 2002 — 5 editions
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More books by Trevanian…
The Eiger Sanction The Loo Sanction Trevanian Times Two: The Ei...
(3 books)
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4.01 avg rating — 15,215 ratings

Quotes by Trevanian  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Irony is Fate's most common figure of speech.”
Trevanian, Shibumi

“It was not their irritating assumption of equality that annoyed Nicholai so much as their cultural confusions. The Americans seemed to confuse standard of living with quality of life, equal opportunity with institutionalized mediocrity, bravery with courage, machismo with manhood, liberty with freedom, wordiness with articulation, fun with pleasure - in short, all of the misconceptions common to those who assume that justice implies equality for all, rather than equality for equals.”
Trevanian, Shibumi

“It's not Americans I find annoying; it's Americanism: a social disease of the postindustrial world that must inevitably infect each of the mercantile nations in turn, and is called 'American' only because your nation is the most advanced case of the malady, much as one speaks of Spanish flu, or Japanese Type-B encephalitis. It's symptoms are a loss of work ethic, a shrinking of inner resources, and a constant need for external stimulation, followed by spiritual decay and moral narcosis. You can recognize the victim by his constant efforts to get in touch with himself, to believe his spiritual feebleness is an interesting psychological warp, to construe his fleeing from responsibility as evidence that he and his life are uniquely open to new experiences. In the later stages, the sufferer is reduced to seeking that most trivial of human activities: fun.”
Trevanian, Shibumi

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