The write stuff: Life lessons from author James
Patterson
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[December 12, 2017]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - (The writer is a
Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)
Most writers dream of publishing a book in their lifetime, and maybe
even selling a few copies. Then there is James Patterson, who has sold
over 300 million of them.
The author of such runaway hits as the "Alex Cross" and "Women's Murder
Club" series raked in an estimated $95 million in 2016, according to
Forbes, placing him among the highest-paid writers on the planet.
For the latest in Reuters' "Life Lessons" series, we talked to Patterson
about what he has learned from the unbelievable plot of his own life.
Q: Who was your biggest influence as a kid?
A: Probably my grandmother. She was very bright, very tough, and very
protective of me. She felt I could do anything I wanted to do, other
than play in the NBA. There was absolutely no doubt in her mind.

Q: Which books shaped your thinking early on?
A: When I got a job at a psychiatric hospital, I used to read a whole
lot at night. The books that got me going were "Mrs. Bridge" and "Mr.
Bridge" by Evan Connell, and "Steps" by Jerzy Kosinski: Very concise and
witty, with tight storytelling. Another book that opened my mind up was
"Tristram Shandy" by Laurence Sterne. It showed me that anything is
possible.
Q: At what point did you realize you could actually make a living at
writing?
A: It was when I won an award for best first mystery novel. I was
sitting there so nervous, like I was at the Academy Awards. I remember
when I got up after the announcement, I said, 'I guess I'm a writer
now.'
Q: Once serious money started coming in, how did you handle that?
A: I have always been pretty practical and frugal. I've been poor. I've
been middle class. And I've been rich. On balance, I prefer being rich.
But I'm happy I went through all those stages. If you have never been
poor, you don't really understand it in a way that people who lived it
can understand it. That's a huge life lesson.
I grew up in a small town in upstate New York, and that really was its
own world. It was a little bit like the book "Hillbilly Elegy". There
must have been some people who got out of there, but I wasn't aware of
any.
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Writer James Patterson. REUTERS/Bret Hartman

Q: What kind of investor would you say you are?
A: I am fairly conservative in my portfolio. We have some real estate here in
Florida and a house in New York state. We have some in hedge funds and some in
conservative bonds. But there is no real reason to take any big risks.
Q: Where do you put your philanthropic dollars?
A: We have a big foundation and give away between $15-$20 million away every
year. A lot of the projects have to do with reading. We award a lot of
scholarships to teachers, 450 of them to 26 different universities.
We have also helped with school libraries, and now we are focusing on classroom
libraries, with $1.75 million in grants. When we put out the word, we had 82,000
requests for help.
Q: Do you have any role models?
A: I look up to a lot of great writers, like James Joyce, Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, and Philip Roth. Also authors of thrillers like Michael Connelly and
Nelson DeMille. I particularly love it when there is somebody who handles fame
really well - like LeBron James. I also think Oprah has done a terrific job of
handling her popularity and money and success. I find her to be pretty heroic.
Q: What life lessons do you try to pass along to your own son Jack, who is 19?
A: To be down to earth and not be impressed that his family has done well. We
work on that a lot. I encourage people to understand who you are, and get
comfortable with it.

My kid worked at the Clinton Foundation last summer and got to talk to President
Clinton for a while. Later the president told me, 'He has a big heart.'
As a parent, that's an amazing thing to hear.
(Editing by Lauren Young and Lisa Shumaker)
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