Ira Berkowitz | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, U.S. | October 8, 1939
Occupation | Writer |
Genre | Crime fiction |
Ira Berkowitz (born October 8, 1939, in Brooklyn, New York) is an American writer of crime fiction. His Jackson Steeg Mystery Series novels are set in Hell's Kitchen.
Berkowitz's debut novel Family Matters, published in 2006, won the Washington Irving Award for Literary Merit, [1] and was a USA Today Top Ten Summer Read selection. [2] He followed up with his second Washington Irving Award for his novel, Old Flame published in 2008. [3]
The third novel in the Jackson Steeg series, Sinners' Ball published in December 2009, [4] won the Shamus Award for Best Original Paperback Crime Fiction Novel of 2009. [5]
Ira Berkowitz's path to writing fiction took thirty years to complete. Growing up in Brooklyn, Berkowitz dreamed of a career in medicine or law. But advertising beckoned. When he retired, he began to write. His first attempt at a novel garnered fifty rejections. A few were encouraging. So, he kept at it.
Berkowitz's novels explore the themes of family, loyalty, and asymmetrical justice – an all too familiar condition where the cards are stacked against the weak.
His novels are set in Hell's Kitchen, a gentrifying neighborhood with a bloody, sordid past. It is as much a major character in the series as Jackson Steeg, an alcoholic ex-NYPD Homicide Detective. Although he mourns the changes in the neighborhood he loves, Steeg knows a simple truth: No matter how much sheen and glitz is slathered on Hell's Kitchen, crime will always thrive in its cracks and crevasses.
Berkowitz lives with his wife in Westchester County, New York.
Washington Irving Award For Literary Merit – Family Matters,Old Flame, [22]
Shamus Award. Best Original Paperback Crime Fiction Novel of 2009 – Sinners' Ball [23]
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