Google
×
Including results for author: Richard Price
Search only for inauthor: Richard Price
Richard Price (born October 12, 1949) is an American novelist and screenwriter, known for the books The Wanderers (1974), Clockers (1992) and Lush Life (2008).
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
Richard Price is the author of several novels—including Lazarus Man, Clockers, and Lush Life—all of which have won universal praise for their vividly etc...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
30-day returns
About the author RICHARD PRICE is an award-winning poet whose work witnesses in-between territories and fluid identities with playfulness and yet a moving ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
People also ask
964 · Free delivery over $40
The writer Richard Price, who grew up in the Bronx projects, is known for his gritty novels of urban life (Lush Life and others), as well as his hit Hollywood ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
Price's novels explore late 20th century urban America in a gritty, realistic manner that has brought him considerable literary acclaim. Several of his novels ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
Follow Richard Price and explore their bibliography from Amazon.com's Richard Price Author Page.
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
Richard Price has 63 books on Goodreads with 317272 ratings. Richard Price's most popular book is Requiem for a Dream.
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
Richard Price, elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters and author most recently of Lush Life, speaks of his upbringing and the influences on his ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
Richard Price is a fiction and crime author born in the Bronx, The United States. He also writes under the pen name Harry Brandt.
He is a writer and producer, known for Sea of Love (1989), Ransom (1996) and The Color of Money (1986). He was previously married to Judith Hudson.
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor: