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Walter Wager

Walter Wager
Walter Wager.jpg
Walter Wager
Born Walter Herman Wager
(1924-09-04)September 4, 1924
The Bronx, New York City, United States
Died July 11, 2004(2004-07-11) (aged 79)
Manhattan, New York, United States
Pen name John Tiger
Walter Hermann
Lee Davis Willoughby
Occupation Writer
Spouse

Sylvia Leonard Wager (divorced; one child)

Winifred McIvor Wager, married 1975 - July 11, 2004 (his death)

Sylvia Leonard Wager (divorced; one child)

Walter Herman Wager (September 4, 1924 – July 11, 2004) was an American crime and espionage-thriller novelist. The movie Telefon, starring Charles Bronson, was inspired by his novel of the same name. His book 58 Minutes was adapted into Die Hard 2, starring Bruce Willis.

Walter Wager was born in The Bronx, New York City, the son of a doctor and a nurse who had emigrated from Tsarist Russia. A 1944 graduate of Columbia College, where he was a member of the Philolexian Society, he went on to a Harvard Law School degree three years later. Passing the bar exams but choosing not to practice, he went on to receive a master's degree in aviation law from Chicago's Northwestern University in 1949, while also serving as an editor of the Journal of Air Law and Commerce, then based in that city.

Afterward, he spent a year at the Sorbonne, in Paris, as a Fulbright Fellow. He spent a year in Israel as an aviation-law consultant for the Israeli Department of Civil Aviation, helping to negotiate a treaty on air space and working out of Lydda Airport in Tel Aviv. In 1952, he returned to New York City, where he worked for the United Nations, editing documents.

Shortly afterward, Wager segued into writing and producing radio and television documentaries for CBS and NBC, and the United States Information Agency, while also beginning a side career as a freelance writer for magazines including Playbill and Show. Under the pseudonym John Tiger, he wrote the paperback original Death Hits the Jackpot (Avon #605) for Avon Books, the fifth publisher he contacted; published in 1954, it paid him $3,000. He recalled in 2000, "I had a friend at a paperback publishing house. I like mystery stories so I thought I could sell this kind of prose." For several years he worked as a freelance writer.


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