55 Famous Writers - What they did before they wrote.
The day jobs of famous authors.
- Anne Rice was a waitress, cook and insurance claims examiner.
- Charles Dickens worked in a shoe-polish factory.
- China Miéville lived in Egypt in 1990, teaching English for a year.
- Dan Brown was a high school English teacher.
- Dean Koontz was an English teacher.
- Don DeLillo was a parking attendant. It was so boring that he became an avid reader, which led him to pursue a career in writing.
- Douglas Adams worked as a hospital porter, barn builder, chicken shed cleaner, a hotel security guard and a bodyguard.
- E.E. Cummings worked as an essayist and portrait artist for ‘Vanity Fair’ magazine.
- Franz Kafka was the Chief Legal Secretary of the Workmen’s Accident Insurance Institute.
- George Orwell was an officer of the Indian Imperial Police in Burma.
- H.G. Wells became an apprentice to a draper at the age of fourteen.
- Harper Lee was a reservation clerk at Eastern Airlines.
- Haruki Murakami worked in a record store during college, and owned a coffee house and jazz bar in Tokyo called the Peter Cat.
- Henry Fielding was a magistrate.
- Herman Melville was employed as a cabin boy on a cruise liner.
- Hilary Mantel was a social worker.
- Ian Rankin was a grape-picker, swineherd, taxman, alcohol researcher, hi-fi journalist, college secretary and punk musician.
- J.D. Salinger was the entertainment director on a Swedish luxury liner.
- J.K. Rowling worked as a secretary and also as a teacher.
- Jack Kerouac was a gas station attendant, cotton picker, night guard, railroad brakeman, dishwasher, construction worker, and a deckhand.
- Jack London worked at a cannery, then became an oyster pirate.
- James Joyce sang and played piano.
- James Patterson worked as a junior copywriter at J. Walter Thompson advertising agency. He later became the CEO.
- Jeanette Winterson was an ice cream truck driver and a make-up artist at a funeral parlour.
- Jeffery Deaver was a lawyer.
- John Grisham worked at a nursery watering bushes, then as a plumber, before becoming a lawyer.
- John Steinbeck was a tour guide at a fish hatchery.
- Jorge Luis Borges worked as an assistant in the Buenos Aires Municipal Library.
- Joseph Conrad was involved in gunrunning and political conspiracy.
- Joseph Heller was a blacksmith’s apprentice, messenger boy, and file clerk.
- Ken Kesey was a voluntary participant in CIA psych tests.
- Kurt Vonnegut was the manager of a Saab dealership, worked in public relations for General Electric, and was a volunteer fire fighter.
- Lee Child was as a television director with a British TV network.
- Margaret Atwood worked as a counter girl in a coffee shop in Toronto.
- Mark Twain was a steamboat pilot.
- Mary Higgins Clark was a secretary, a model, and a stewardess.
- Michael Crichton was a medical doctor.
- Neil Gaiman was a journalist, writing articles for British newspapers and magazines.
- Nicholas Sparks was a real estate appraiser, sold dental products by phone, and started his own manufacturing business.
- P.D. James worked for the National Health Service and the Civil Service.
- Pat Conroy taught English in Beaufort, South Carolina.
- Paulo Coelho worked as a songwriter, an actor, a journalist, and theatre director.
- Philip Pullman was a teacher.
- Raymond Carver worked at a sawmill, as a janitor, delivery man and again at the sawmill to support his family while building his career.
- Roald Dahl worked for the Shell Oil Company of East Africa until World War II. He then served in the Royal Air Force as a fighter pilot.
- Robert Frost was a newspaper boy, his mother’s teaching assistant, and a light-bulb-filament replacer in a factory.
- Stephen King was a high school janitor
- Stephenie Meyer was a receptionist in a property company.
- Sylvia Plath worked as a receptionist at a psychiatric hospital.
- T.S. Eliot worked at the Colonial and Foreign Accounts desk for Lloyd’s Bank of London
- Tess Gerritsen was a medical doctor.
- Tom Wolfe was a reporter.
- Vladimir Nabokov was an entomologist.
- William Faulkner was a mail man.
- William S. Burroughs was an exterminator. by Amanda Patterson
No comments:
Post a Comment