In 1990, no publisher would take a chance on a first novel about a man
torn between his girlfriend and his secret boyfriend, all of them
black. Undaunted, the author, a successful IBM salesman who was used to
breaking barriers, having been the first black editor of the yearbook
at the University of Arkansas and the first black male Razorbacks
cheerleader, decided to publish it himself. At black bookstores, book
clubs, and beauty salons around Atlanta, he sold thousands of copies to
gay men and straight women. A local sales rep mentioned the book’s
popularity to the publisher of Anchor/Doubleday, which quickly
republished that novel, Invisible Life, and all ten subsequent books by the phenomenal E. Lynn Harris. Every one of his books has been a bestseller. His sixth and seventh novels, Not a Day Goes By and Any Way the Wind Blows both debuted at #2 on the New York Times list. His author events regularly attract 900 people or
more. Upbeat, optimistic, and romantic, his books never gloss over
life’s struggles and pain. His memoir, What Becomes of the Brokenhearted
,
included his own coming out story as well as bouts with depression,
drinking, low self-esteem, and a suicide attempt just before he decided
to start writing. His most recent novel, Basketball Jones
whose paperback edition is coming in August, confronts homophobia and double lives in the NBA. To date his books have sold more than four million copies.
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