The American lawyer Erle Stanley Gardner was also an author who wrote about 100 detective stories and crime novels. He was born on July 17, 1889 in Malden, Massachusetts, in the United States. UU. And he died on March 11, 1970 in Temecula, California, in the United States. UU. When I was 80, he was the son of a mining engineer. After spending some time in Malden, the Gardner family moved to Portland, Oregon, and then moved to the Klondike during the gold rush. Eventually, the Gardner family settled in Oroville, California, which was a mining industry that developed a small town. Erle Stanley Gardner graduated from the Palo Alto High School in California in 1909 and enrolled in the law school of the University of Valparaiso in Indiana. His university …show more content…
In the end, luck had to be interposed to arbitrate. While working as a typist in a California law firm, he began to be curious about the subject of the law, and decided to practice law in his profession. He passed the bar exam and then attended the California Bar Association in 1911. He opened his own law firm in Merced, California, when Erle was 21 years old. Erle Gardner soon quit law practice for three years, instead of working as a sales manager for Consolidates Sales Co. He married Natalie Frances Talbert in 1921, the year he returned to Ventura and started practicing as a lawyer. He practiced as a lawyer for the next 12 …show more content…
Green, the first pseudonym of many pseudonyms used during his career as a writer. He wrote about 100 detective novels and crime novels that sold more than 1,000,000 copies each, making it easily the best-selling American writer of his time. In the early 1920s Gardner began writing Western and mysterious stories for magazines, often under the pseudonyms of A.A. Right, Carleton Kendrake and Charles J. Kenny. At that point, he also began to write, forcing himself to produce four thousand words per night, while still practicing the law during the working day. It took him two years, but he made his first sale to the pulp. It would not be the last one. With the sale of his first novel in 1933 he abandoned the practice of law and devoted himself to writing full-time, or more precisely to dictate.
Gardner said that "I write to earn money and write to give the reader great fun". He surrendered on both sides. He favored action and dialogue on characterization or excessively complicated plots and tended to emphasize "speed, situation and suspense". It was exactly what the pulp