Keith Thomson: Difference between revisions

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'''Keith Thompson''' (born c. [[1965]]) is a former cartoonist, basketball player, filmmaker, and screenwriter and currently a blogger and novelist.
'''Keith Thomson''' (born c. [[1965]]) is a former cartoonist, basketball player, filmmaker, and screenwriter and currently a blogger and novelist.


Thompson grew up in Connecticut and studied history at Columbia University in New York, New York. He played semi-professional basketball in France and later drew editorial cartoons for ''Newsday''. He helped a friend develop a short film, "Cupidity" which Thompson directed. It played at the Sundance Film Festival and brought the duo a 3-picture deal with Tri-Star. Only one of the three films they wrote over the next six years, "The Mantis Murder", was ever shot, and it was released straight to video.
Thomson grew up in Connecticut and studied history at Columbia University in New York, New York. He played semi-professional basketball in France and later drew editorial cartoons for ''Newsday''. He helped a friend develop a short film, "Cupidity" which Thomson directed. It played at the Sundance Film Festival and brought the duo a 3-picture deal with Tri-Star. Only one of the three films they wrote over the next six years, "The Mantis Murder", was ever shot, and it was released straight to video.


Frustrated with the restrictions of screenwriting, Thompson took the advice of his agent and began planning a novel. He took a course in writing at Stanford University and began ''Pirates of Pensacola'' as his thesis work. He met [[Karen Shepard]], now his wife, at a writer's party at the Yale Club in New York. She brought him to [[Birmingham]].
Frustrated with the restrictions of screenwriting, Thomson took the advice of his agent and began planning a novel. He took a course in writing at Stanford University and began ''Pirates of Pensacola'' as his thesis work. He met [[Karen Shepard]], now his wife, at a writer's party at the Yale Club in New York. She brought him to [[Birmingham]].


Thompson, who has contributed to ''[[Birmingham Weekly]]'' and ''Garden & Gun'', is currently a blogger on intelligence issues for ''The Huffington Post'' and completed another novel, ''Once A Spy'', which was published in [[2010]] as the first of a two-book deal with Doubleday. Sony Pictures owns the film rights.
Thomson, who has contributed to ''[[Birmingham Weekly]]'' and ''Garden & Gun'', is currently a blogger on intelligence issues for ''The Huffington Post'' and completed another novel, ''Once A Spy'', which was published in [[2010]] as the first of a two-book deal with Doubleday. Sony Pictures owns the film rights.


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
* [http://keiththomsonbooks.com Keith Thompson] author website
* [http://keiththomsonbooks.com Keith Thomson] author website
* [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/keith-thomson Keith Thompson] at ''The Huffington Post''
* [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/keith-thomson Keith Thompon] at ''The Huffington Post''


{{DEFAULTSORT:Thompson, Ketih}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Thomson, Ketih}}
[[Category:1965 births]]
[[Category:1965 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]

Revision as of 00:15, 8 February 2011

Keith Thomson (born c. 1965) is a former cartoonist, basketball player, filmmaker, and screenwriter and currently a blogger and novelist.

Thomson grew up in Connecticut and studied history at Columbia University in New York, New York. He played semi-professional basketball in France and later drew editorial cartoons for Newsday. He helped a friend develop a short film, "Cupidity" which Thomson directed. It played at the Sundance Film Festival and brought the duo a 3-picture deal with Tri-Star. Only one of the three films they wrote over the next six years, "The Mantis Murder", was ever shot, and it was released straight to video.

Frustrated with the restrictions of screenwriting, Thomson took the advice of his agent and began planning a novel. He took a course in writing at Stanford University and began Pirates of Pensacola as his thesis work. He met Karen Shepard, now his wife, at a writer's party at the Yale Club in New York. She brought him to Birmingham.

Thomson, who has contributed to Birmingham Weekly and Garden & Gun, is currently a blogger on intelligence issues for The Huffington Post and completed another novel, Once A Spy, which was published in 2010 as the first of a two-book deal with Doubleday. Sony Pictures owns the film rights.

References

  • Brock, Glenny (March 3, 2010) "Keith Thomson thrills with ONCE A SPY." Birmingham Weekly
  • Carlton, Bob (March 9, 2010) "Birmingham author puts fresh spin on the spy novel." Birmingham News

External links