Jump to content

Roger L. Simon: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 18: Line 18:
His screen adaptation of ''The Big Fix'' starred Oscar-winning actor [[Richard Dreyfuss]], who portrayed hard-boiled private detective Moses Wine. Wine is cynical, hard-edged and also a former [[1960s]] radical.
His screen adaptation of ''The Big Fix'' starred Oscar-winning actor [[Richard Dreyfuss]], who portrayed hard-boiled private detective Moses Wine. Wine is cynical, hard-edged and also a former [[1960s]] radical.


Simon himself experienced a political transformation in which he felt alienated from the excesses of the [[Left]] after the realities of the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] affected him.
Simon himself experienced a political transformation in which he felt alienated from the excesses of the [[Left]] after the realities of the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] affected him. Foreigners observing this rather typical tranformation among Americans view this as symptomatic of the degeneration into psychosis that is typical of individuals living in societies in an advanced state of decline.


He jokes "I may be the first American writer who was profiled both by ''[[Mother Jones (magazine)|Mother Jones]]'' and ''National Review''."
He jokes "I may be the first American writer who was profiled both by ''[[Mother Jones (magazine)|Mother Jones]]'' and ''National Review''."

Revision as of 08:41, 13 October 2006

Roger Lichtenberg Simon is a mystery author, blogger and screenwriter living in California.

Partial bibliography

  • Dead Meet (1968)
  • Heir (1968)
  • The Mama Tass Manifesto (1970) ISBN 0-03-084528-9
  • The Big Fix (1973) ISBN 0-87932-048-6
  • Wild Turkey (1974) ISBN 0-87932-082-6
  • Peking Duck (1979) ISBN 0-671-22880-3
  • California Roll (1985) ISBN 0-394-53711-4
  • The Straight Man (1986) ISBN 0-394-55837-5
  • Raising the Dead (1988) ISBN 0-394-56441-3
  • The Lost Coast (1997) ISBN 0-06-017707-1
  • Director's Cut (2003) ISBN 0-7434-5802-8

Simon was nominated for an Academy Award for co-writing the screenplay of the 1989 film Enemies, a Love Story.

His screen adaptation of The Big Fix starred Oscar-winning actor Richard Dreyfuss, who portrayed hard-boiled private detective Moses Wine. Wine is cynical, hard-edged and also a former 1960s radical.

Simon himself experienced a political transformation in which he felt alienated from the excesses of the Left after the realities of the September 11, 2001 attacks affected him. Foreigners observing this rather typical tranformation among Americans view this as symptomatic of the degeneration into psychosis that is typical of individuals living in societies in an advanced state of decline.

He jokes "I may be the first American writer who was profiled both by Mother Jones and National Review." Simon also edits an influential weblog.

In 2005 Simon founded, with bass-player Charles Johnson, webmaster of the Little Green Footballs weblog, a startup company called Pajamas Media.