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Author Bio
Birth—1952
Where—New York, New York, USA
Education—B.A., Middlebury College; M.B.A., Columbia University
Currently—


Andrew Gross is an American author of thriller novels including four New York Times bestsellers. He is best known for his collaborations with suspense writer James Patterson. Gross’s books feature close family bonds, relationships characterized by loss or betrayal and large degree of emotional resonance which generally lead to wider crimes and cover-ups.

Early life and education
Andrew Gross was born in New York City in 1952. He grew up in Manhattan and attended the Barnard School for Boys. Both his father and his grandfather on his mother’s side were successful clothing manufacturers; they ran the Leslie Fay Companies, named after his mother.

Gross received a degree in English from Middlebury College in 1974. In 1979, he met his wife, Lynn, on a blind date in New York City, and they married three years later. In 1982, he received a Masters in Business Policy from Columbia University.

Business career
After a two-year stint in Denver, where he worked as a dress buyer, he opened a stew-and-soup fast food pilot named Ebeneezer's. He eventually went back to work for his family's publicly held apparel firm, the Leslie Fay Companies.

In 1984, Gross took over Head NV Sportswear, the struggling arm of the iconic ski and tennis brand, and by 1989, had repositioned it into the number one upscale producer of tennis and ski apparel in the U.S. and as a thriving brand in Europe as well. He left that endeavor for a larger role at Leslie Fay (which then had close to a billion dollars in annual sales and, by then, listed on the New York Stock Exchange).

As Gross describes it, "sometimes the toughest thing about being in a family company is that it's filled with your own family", so in 1991, he left to pursue his own opportunities at Le Coq Sportif, a boutique tennis/golf brand, and Sun Ice, Inc., a Canadian skiwear manufacturer. The Canadian firm, however, ended "poorly and abruptly", as Gross says, "hastening my writing career."

Writing
Gross attended the Writers Program at the University of Iowa. It took three years to finish a draft of his first book, Hydra (1998), a political thriller. He recalls that time:

After dozens of rejections from agents and ultimately publishers, not knowing what my next step in life was, and sitting around my study, wondering what cliff I was going to drive our SUV off of, I received a phone call from someone who asked, "Can you take a call from James Patterson?"

Gross met with Patterson and discussed the early concepts for what ultimately became the Women's Murder Club series. Patterson explained that the head of his publishing house had forwarded Gross's unpublished manuscript to him with the words scratched on the cover: "This guy does women well!" Patterson and Gross formed a partnership in less than a week.

Gross worked with Patterson on several books in this series, including Second Chance and Third Degree, both of which became best sellers. Then, they branched out on different themes together, co-authoring other bestsellers: The Jester, Lifeguard and Judge and Jury.

Solo career
In 2006, Gross left Patterson to pursue a solo writing career. In 2007, The Blue Zone debuted on the New York Times Best Seller list. A year later, Gross followed up with The Dark Tide (2007), which the International Thriller Writers Association nominated Thriller of the Year. That book's detective Ty Hauck of Greenwich, Connecticut, became the lead character in several other Gross's conspiracy-based bestsellers, Don't Look Twice (2009), Reckless (2010), and One Mile Under (2015). These collectively are referred to a the Ty Hauck series.
In all, Gross has written 10 books on his own, preceded by his five books with James Patterson.

His tenth book, The One Man departs from Gross's usual crime thrillers. Set in World War II, it concerns an attempted rescue of a (fictional) world-renowned physicist from Auschwitz. (Adapted from Wikipedia. Retrieved 8/24/2016.)