Gillian Flynn | |
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Flynn at the 52nd New York Film Festival, September 2014
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Born | Gillian Schieber Flynn February 24, 1971 Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. |
Occupation | Author, screenwriter, comic book writer |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater |
University of Kansas Medill School of Journalism |
Period | 2007–present |
Genre | Fiction, thriller, mystery |
Notable works | |
Spouse | Brett Nolan (m. 2007) |
Children | 2 |
Website | |
gillian-flynn |
Gillian Schieber Flynn (/ˈɡɪliən/; born February 24, 1971) is an American author, screenwriter, comic book writer and former television critic for Entertainment Weekly. Flynn's three published novels are the thrillers Sharp Objects, Dark Places, and Gone Girl, the last of which she adapted for the screen in the 2014 film of the same name directed by David Fincher.
Flynn was born in Kansas City, Missouri and raised in midtown Kansas City's Coleman Highlands neighborhood. Both of her parents were professors at Metropolitan Community College–Penn Valley: her mother, Judith Ann (née Schieber), was a reading-comprehension professor, and her father, Edwin Matthew Flynn, was a film professor. She has an older brother, Travis, who is a railroad machinist. Her uncle is Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Robert Schieber. Flynn was "painfully shy" and found escape in reading and writing. Growing up, Flynn's father would take her to watch horror movies.
Flynn attended Bishop Miege High School and graduated in 1989. As a teenager, she worked odd jobs which required her to do things such as dress up as a giant "yogurt cone who wore a tuxedo."