Brad Meltzer didn't hope all his life to become a novelist. He came to it by chance, after a job at
Games magazine didn't pan out. "I had no idea what to do," he says. "So I did what all of us would do in that situation. I said, 'I'm gonna write a novel.'" After one false start, a book called
Fraternity that 24 publishers rejected, Meltzer hit his stride. In 1997,
The Tenth Justice (which earned him extra credit as a student at Columbia Law School) was picked up by Morrow and hit
The New York Times bestseller list. A year later, he repeated the performance with
Dead Even. He's been writing bestselling legal thrillers ever since.
Critics like Meltzer's fast pace and nifty plots (Kirkus called The Tenth Justice "a mean, paranoid fantasy that'll have you turning pages in a frenzy," and USA Today said it "reads fast, rings true, and refreshingly breaks the mold of legal thrillers"), but it's the details that distinguish his novels from most legal fiction. The key, he says, is "Research, research, research," a task that can consume two to six months of his year-long writing schedule.
In addition to his thrillers, Meltzer is a bestselling author of critically acclaimed comic book series like Identity Crisis, Green Arrow, and Justice League. He has also written short stories, television scripts and nonfiction articles, including reviews of The Sopranos, the multiple Emmy Award-winning TV show.