Best-selling novelist James Patterson is the former chair of the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency. After writing five novels with modest sales, including the Edgar Allan Poe Award-winning
The Thomas Berryman Number, Patterson found overnight success with
Along Came a Spider, the first in what has become known as the "nursery rhyme adventures" It introduced Alex Cross, an African-American police psychologist who figures into several of Patterson's thrillers. Cross, wrote Cynthia Sanz in
People, "is known for his obsessive investigations and his ability to get inside the minds of the most deranged killers." Patterson explained to Bernard and Zaleski why a white author chose a black lead character for his mysteries: "It struck me that a black male who does the things that Alex does--who succeeds in a couple of ways, tries to bring up his kids in a good way, who tries to continue to live in his neighborhood and who has enormous problems with evil in the world--he's a hero."- from
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