A. J. Finn

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A. J. Finn
Ajfinn2019.png
A. J. Finn in 2019
BornDaniel Mallory
1979 (age 4445)
New York City, U.S.
Pen nameA. J. Finn
OccupationAuthor
Education Duke University (BA)
University of Oxford (MPhil)
Period2018–present
GenreCrime fiction, psychological thrillers
Notable works The Woman in the Window (2018)

Daniel Mallory (born 1979) [1] is an American author who writes crime fiction under the name A. J. Finn. His 2018 novel The Woman in the Window debuted at number one on the New York Times Best Seller list. [1] The Woman in the Window was adapted into a feature film of the same name, directed by Joe Wright and featuring Amy Adams, Julianne Moore and Gary Oldman. [2]

Contents

In 2019 an article in the The New Yorker stated that Mallory had frequently lied about his personal life and health. Mallory obliquely acknowledged being deceptive in a statement. Mallory attributed his actions to his struggles with bipolar depressive disorder, which drew criticism from psychiatrists. [1] His second novel, End of Story , was published in February 2024. [3]

Early life and education

Mallory was born in New York City and moved with his family to Charlotte, North Carolina, where he attended Charlotte Latin School. [4] He went on to attend Duke University, where he majored in English [5] and acted. [6] He studied at Oxford University during his junior year and returned to Oxford after college for graduate work, completing a master's degree. [6] [7]

Career

Before becoming a novelist, Mallory worked in publishing in New York and London for several years, including at Little, Brown and Company and William Morrow and Company, a division of HarperCollins. [5]

The Woman in the Window

Mallory wrote The Woman in the Window , his first novel, while living in New York and told The Guardian it took him exactly a year to write. [6] [8]

The novel debuted in January 2018 at number one on the New York Times bestseller list. [5] [9] The Woman in the Window follows the life of Dr. Anna Fox, who suffers from agoraphobia and lives a reclusive life at her large home in New York City, where she one day witnesses a murder across the street. Janet Maslin in the New York Times said, "A book that's as devious as this novel will delight anyone who's been disappointed too often" and that it holds up "pretty well, but there are problems" with writing that "is serviceable, sometimes bordering on strange." [10] [11] The novel was subsequently adapted into a feature film directed by Joe Wright with a screenplay by Tracy Letts. The film was originally set for a theatrical release on May 15, 2020, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic was sold to Netflix, which began streaming it on May 14, 2021. [12] [13] [14]

End of Story

Finn's second novel was published by HarperCollins on February 20, 2024 (United States) and February 29, 2024 (United Kingdom). [15] [16] Set in San Francisco, it is a thriller about a young woman writing the biography of a celebrated crime writer.

Style and influences

A.J. Finn has cited classic film noir and suspense fiction as influences. [17] He has shared that The Woman in the Window takes cues from Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window (1954) and has been influenced by genre classics such as Gaslight and Gone Girl. [18] [19] [20]

Allegations of lying

In February 2019, an article in The New Yorker on The Woman in the Window alleged that Mallory had been "an unreliable narrator" about some of his personal biography, including falsely claiming to have had cancer and misrepresenting his academic credentials, amongst other things. [7] [21] For instance, the article describes a series of emails supposedly authored by Mallory's brother, describing Mallory undergoing a seven-hour spine surgery to remove a tumor and suffering severe cardiac arrest. Mallory then returned to work, largely unchanged, within several weeks. [7] The article also describes claims that Mallory stated his brother committed suicide and his mother died of cancer; both were alive as of 2019. [7] Mallory is described as claiming, inaccurately, to have received a doctorate from Oxford. [7] The article also describes Mallory's false claim to have worked on Final Destination, a film released in 2000. [7]

Mallory admitted that he had "stated, implied, or allowed others to believe that [he] was afflicted with a physical malady instead of a psychological one," saying that "like many afflicted with severe bipolar II disorder, [he] experienced crushing depressions, delusional thoughts, morbid obsessions, and memory problems." He went on to say that he "felt intensely ashamed of my psychological struggles—they were my scariest, most sensitive secret." Psychiatrists disputed his assertion that the condition causes delusions, memory loss or deceptive behavior. [7] [22] Mallory's psychiatrist disclosed that Mallory sometimes suffered from "somatic complaints, fears, and preoccupations" due to his bipolar depression. [7]

In response to his explanation, The Guardian wrote "His account would not explain instances where he inflated his professional experience to smooth his rapid advance up the ranks of publishing" and "that Mallory was helped to rise with such speed, on the back of unchecked claims about his experience and competence, is not only depressing for those working honestly in the industry, but also deeply infuriating." [23]

Author Karin Slaughter, who worked with Mallory at William Morrow, noted that "he was extremely professional and he was really one of the best advocates I could have had. He wrote fantastic copy, he was great with jacketing. He really understood the business" and said the New Yorker article "felt like a hit piece". [24] Irish author Carlo Gébler, who objected to a different New Yorker article by the same journalist about Irish novelist Edna O'Brien, criticized it for its "extraordinary amount of animus" toward Mallory. [25] [26] [27]

Plagiarism allegations

In 2019, the New York Times investigated plagiarism rumors due to what it described as "numerous, and detailed" plot similarities and "nearly identical plot twists in the final act" between The Woman in the Window and another psychological thriller, Sarah A. Denzil's Saving April. [28]

Saving April was released in March 2016, with The Woman In The Window coming out in January 2018.

Five days after the article's publication, The Times reviewed original outlines of The Woman in the Window, which were said to have been sent by Mallory to his literary agent at ICM, dated September 20, 2015 and October 4, 2015. The Times concluded that "Some of the overlapping plot points, including the fact that both protagonists were fighting with their husbands about infidelity before the car crashes, and that the psychopathic teenager tortured animals, while not in the original outline, were contained in the October version". It noted that Ms. Denzil began writing SavingApril." later in October 2015.

In addition, the director of 1995 film Copycat, Jon Amiel, also noted similarities from The Woman In The Window to his own movie. He told the New Yorker this was “not actionable, but certainly worth noting", adding: "One would have hoped that the author might have noted it himself”.

Personal life

Mallory is openly gay. [29] He dedicated his first novel to his then-boyfriend. [5]

Bibliography

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References

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