Richard Price (born October 12, 1949) is an American novelist and screenwriter, known for the books The Wanderers (1974), Clockers (1992) and Lush Life (2008). Price's novels explore late-20th-century urban America in a gritty, realistic manner that has brought him considerable literary acclaim. Several of his novels are set in a fictional northern New Jersey city called Dempsy.
Price's first novel was The Wanderers (1974), a coming-of-age story set in the Bronx in 1962, written when Price was 24 years old. It was adapted into a film in 1979, with a screenplay by Rose Kaufman and Philip Kaufman and directed by the latter.
In his review of Price's novel Lush Life (2008), Walter Kirn compared Price to Raymond Chandler and Saul Bellow.[4] In July 2010, a group art show inspired by Lush Life was held in nine galleries in New York City.[5]
Price wrote a detective novel entitled The Whites under the pen name Harry Brandt.[6] The book was released February 17, 2015.[6] Film producer Scott Rudin will be producing a film version of the novel.[6]
Price wrote and conceptualized the 18-minute music video for Michael Jackson's "Bad". He also wrote for the HBO series The Wire, winning the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2008 ceremony for his work on the fifth season of the series.[8] He created a police drama series NYC 22 in 2012, it was cancelled after one season. His eight-part HBO miniseries The Night Of premiered in July 2016. Also premiering on HBO, in September 2017, was the series The Deuce—co-written and executive produced by Price. He acts as the showrunner for the 2020 HBO miniseries The Outsider, based on a novel by Stephen King.
Price is often cast in cameo roles in the films he writes.[citation needed]
^Price, Richard (October 25, 1981). "The Fonzie of Literature". The New York Times Book Review. Retrieved 2009-11-16.
^"Return of the Wanderer," online reproduction of Rosenbaum, Ron, "Return of the Wanderer," Vanity Fair, June 1992. Price describes his accepting a place in "Wallace Stegner’s graduate creative-writing program at Stanford."
^"Awards". American Academy of Arts and Letters. Retrieved 9 January 2023. To see the award, click LITERATURE, then click Arts and Letters Award in Literature, then click LOAD ALL.