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Don Pendleton was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, December 12, 1927,
son of Louis Thomas Pendleton and Drucy Valentine, and was a direct
descendant of Philip and Isabella (Hurt) Pendleton, who came from Norwich,
England to settle in Virginia in 1674.
During World War II, on December 7, 1942, days before his fifteenth birthday,
Don enlisted in the U.S. Navy, serving as a Radioman First Class until
November of 1947. He served in all the war theaters, receiving various
medals including the Naval Commendation Medal, Iwo Jima 1945, and helped
set up the postwar air traffic control networks in the Pacific, (in a
joint civil/military project). He received his GED certificate of high
school equivalency while in the Navy in 1947. In 1952, in the midst of
the Korean conflict, Don returned to active Naval service for two years.
His skill as a radioman during World War II led him to the railroad after
the war where he was employed as a telegrapher for Southern Pacific Railroad
until 1957. For the next four years, he worked for the CAA/FAA as an air
traffic control specialist. In 1961, his career turned toward aerospace
engineering where he served in management positions during Martin-Marietta's
Titan ICBM programs, as an engineering administrator in NASA's Apollo
Moonshot program, and with the United States Air Force C-5 Galaxy program.
He began writing in 1957 and his first short story was published that
year, followed by a first novel in 1961. But it was not until 1967, at
the age of forty, that his attention turned to full-time writing.
After producing a number of short stories, science fiction and mystery
novels, he launched, in 1969, the phenomenal Executioner Series
of novels, which quickly emerged as the original, definitive Action/Adventure
series. The first Executioner novel, War Against the
Mafia, was followed by an additional thirty-seven sequels during
the ensuing twelve years. The Executioner: Mack Bolan series
has been published around the world in more than twenty-five languages
with close to two hundred million copies in print.
Dozens of imitators, inspired by Pendleton's success, arose during the
early 1970's to constitute a new literary genre. The term action/adventure,
coined by Don Pendleton, soon spread to encompass television and motion
picture formats as well.
In 1980, Don franchised his Executioner characters to Harlequin's
Worldwide Library of Toronto, Gold Eagle Imprint. Until his death, Don
served as Consulting Editor on the Gold Eagle Program, although was not
directly responsible for any of the Mack Bolan novels written
since 1981. Their team of writers have produced close to four hundred
novels based on Don's original works, including several spin-off series:
Able Team, Phoenix Force, Stonyman, and Super
Bolan.
In 1993, Don and his wife, Linda Pendleton adapted and scripted his first
Executioner novel, War Against the Mafia
to graphic Comic book format. Following Don's death, Linda Pendleton adapted
and scripted the second Executioner, Death Squad, to Comic
book format published by Vivid Comics in 1996.
In addition to being a novelist, Don was a poet, a screenwriter, essayist
and metaphysical scholar. In 1990, he turned to nonfiction with the publication
of To Dance With Angels, written with his wife, Linda Pendleton.
The book, a definite study of life after death, is currently in its fourth
edition.
Don's nonfiction books now include three manuscripts published posthumously
as ebooks. A Search for Meaning From the Surface of a Small Planet
by Don Pendleton; The Metaphysics of the Novel, the
Inner Workings of a Novel and a Novelist by Don Pendleton with
Linda Pendleton; Whispers From the Soul: The Divine Dance of Consciousness
by Don and Linda Pendleton.
A Search for Meaning From the Surface of a Small Planet won
the Independent Ebooks Award for the Best of Nonfiction, 2002. The book
is now in print.
His last novel, a crime/suspense story written in collaboration with
Linda, One Dark and Stormy Night...'
has been published as an ebook and was an EPPIE 2001 Award Finalist.
The book, now titled, Roulette, is now in print.
Don Pendleton is acknowledged
as the "father of the modern Action/Adventure
novel." His Mack Bolan, The Executioner, theme is "Live
Large" and recently the Random House Historical Dictionary
of American Slang, Volume II (H-O) gives derivation credit for
"live large" to Don Pendleton and his Executioner
Series.
Don's more recent works, following the Executioner series
include the Joe Copp, Private Eye series of six books and
the six Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective mystery novels. All
twelve books are again in print.
His works were often flavored with a metaphysical theme and Don considered
the Executioner series to be a study in the metaphysics
of violence. His Mack Bolan character embodies the essence
of a true literary hero, thus, the apparent reason for the world-wide
popularity with readers for more than thirty years and, in some cases,
three generations of readers.
Linda recently made available on CD three of Don's recordings, Spiritual
Encounter, Workout and Meditation; Meditation
for Women, Honoring Your Femininity; and Metaphysics of
the Novel, The Creative Rationale, a unique look at writing a
novel and the bases for the book, Metaphysics of the Novel, The
Inner Workings of a Novel and a Novelist.
Don Pendleton was a member of the Authors Guild, Inc.; The Authors League;
The Writers Guild of America, West; a past West Coast Director of the
Mystery Writers of America; NAPRA; International Platform Association;
and a frequent speaker on school and college campuses and at writers'
symposiums.
In 1992, Don received the Lifetime Achievement Gem Award presented by
Diamond Comic Distributors, Inc., a leading Comic Book distributor.
Several of his earlier books were written under the pseudonyms, Dan Britain
and Stephan Gregory. He published more than one hundred twenty-five books
in his long career and many of those books enjoyed foreign language publication.
Don and Linda married in 1985. He is the father of four sons and two
daughters by a prior marriage. Don Pendleton died October 23, 1995 at
the age of sixty-seven.
Executioner Manuscripts: Lilly Library Manuscript Collection,
Indiana University,
Bloomington, Indiana.
The George Kelley Paperback and Pulp Fiction Collection,
Lockwood Memorial Library, University at Buffalo Libraries, Buffalo, New
York.
Biographical reference and bibliography:
Twentieth Century Crime and Mystery Writers, (St. Martin's
Press);
Contemporary Authors (Gale);
Queen's Edition, Dictionary of International Biography (Melrose - London,
England;
Murder Ink (Workman);
Who's Who In the Midwest.


This biographical information is under Copyright of Linda Pendleton and
may not be used in any way, including posting to web sites, without the
written permission of Linda Pendleton.
This site does not have any affiliation with Pinnacle Books, Kensington
Books, or Harlequin's World Wide Library, Gold Eagle Imprint.
This site is owned by Linda Pendleton.
©Copyright 2000, 2001, 2002 by Linda Pendleton, All Rights Reserved.
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