Donald Bain (writer)

Donald Sutherland Bain (March 6, 1935 – October 21, 2017) was an American author and ghostwriter, having written over 115 books in his 40-year career.[1][2]

Bibliography

The Coffee, Tea or Me? series

byline: Trudy Baker and Rachel Jones

  • Coffee, Tea or Me? (1967)
  • The Coffee Tea or Me Girls’ Round-the-World Diary (1970)
  • The Coffee Tea or Me Girls Lay It on the Line (1972)
  • The Coffee Tea or Me Girls Get Away From it All (1974)

The Murder, She Wrote series

byline: Jessica Fletcher and Donald Bain

A spin-off book series based on the Murder, She Wrote American crime drama television series starring Angela Lansbury as mystery writer and amateur detective Jessica Fletcher.

Comedic novels

  • Tender Loving Care – byline: Joni Moura & Jackie Sutherland (1969)
  • Girlpower – byline: Kathy Cole & Donna Bain (1971)
  • How to Make a Good Airline Stewardess – byline: Cornelius Wohl & Bill Wenzel (1972)
  • If It Moves, Kiss It – byline: Joni Moura & Jackie Sutherland (1973)
  • We Gave at the Office – byline: Laura Mills & Pauline Burlick (1977)
  • Fly Me - byline: Cornelius Wohl & Bill Wenzel (1974)
  • Teachers Pet – byline: Janet McMillan & Mitzi Sims (1975)
  • The Casting Couch and Me – byline: Joan Wood (1975)
  • Wall Street & Broad – byline: Teri Palmer (1976)

The J.D. Hardin western series

byline: J.D. Hardin

  • Bloody Sands
  • The Spirit & the Flesh
  • Death Flotilla
  • The Lone Star Massacre
  • Raider’s Revenge
  • Raider’s Hell
  • Apache Gold
  • Bibles, Bullets & Brides
  • Death Lode

Other novels

  • The Airport Affair (1975) – byline: David Toma & Jack Pearl
  • The Affair of the Unhappy Hooker (1976) – byline: David Toma & Jack Pearl
  • Sado Cop (1976) – byline: Nick Vasile
  • A Member of the Family (1993) – byline: Nick Vasile
  • Raven (1987) – byline: Mike Lundy
  • Baby Farm (1987) – byline: Mike Lundy
  • Daughter of the Sand (1978) – byline: Pamela South
  • The Eagle & the Serpent (1982) – byline: Lee Jackson
  • Texas Lily (1987) – byline: Stephanie Blake

Biographies and autobiographies

  • Murder HE Wrote: A Successful Writer's Life (2006) (Autobiography)

Other books

  • The Racing Flag (1965) – byline: Bloys Britt & Bill France
  • Veronica (1969) – byline: Veronica Lake (her autobiography, whose ghostwriter he was)
  • The Case Against Private Aviation (1969) – byline: Donald Bain
  • Long John Nebel (1974) – byline: Donald Bain
  • The Control of Candy Jones (1976) – byline: Donald Bain
  • Club Tropique (1978) – byline: Donald Bain
  • War in Illinois (1978) – byline: Donald Bain
  • Charlie & the Shawneetown Dame (2004) – byline: Donald Bain
  • Caviar, Caviar, Caviar (1981) – byline: Gerald M. Stein & Donald Bain
  • The "Girls" in the Newsroom (1983) – byline: Marjorie Margolies
  • The World’s Best Bartenders’ Guide (1998)– byline: Joseph Scott & Donald Bain
  • Margaret Truman's Experiment in Murder (2012)
  • Margaret Truman's Undiplomatic Murder (2014)
  • Margaret Truman's Internship In Murder (2015)
  • Margaret Truman's Deadly Medicine (2016)
  • Margaret Truman's Allied in Danger (2017)

Unacknowledged books

A ghostwriter is often required to be anonymous as a part of the contract to write the book. Some sources claim Bain is the author of most of the mystery novels attributed to Margaret Truman. While Bain initially denied this,[3] he wrote a column in the March 14, 2014 issue of Publishers Weekly and finally acknowledged writing "27 novels in the Margaret Truman Capital Crimes series (mostly bylined by Truman, my close collaborator  my name is on only the most recent entries, released after her death)."[4]

See also

References

  1. Roberts, Sam (26 October 2017). "Donald Bain, Widely Read Author (but Not by That Name), Dies at 82". A. G. Sulzberger. The New York Times. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  2. Schudel, Matt (28 October 2017). "Donald Bain, ghostwriter of dozens of books, dies at 82". Fred Ryan. The Washington Post. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  3. "The Ghost of Miss Truman". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30.
  4. Bain, Donald (March 14, 2014). "A Novel of My Own". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
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