William Bernhardt
Activity Sheet
Biography from Book
Reporter
William Bernhardt
is the author of fourteen books with more than ten million copies
in print worldwide, including his internationally bestselling
series of courtroom novels featuring attorney Ben Kincaid (the
most recent: Murder One), which inspired Library Journal
to name Bernhardt the "master of the courtroom drama,"
and The Vancouver Sun to dub him "the American equivalent
of P.G. Wodehouse and John Mortimer." Bernhardt's novels
are renowned for their unexpected twists, legal realism, breathless
pace, and for examining trends and issues in American society
that later come to national prominence. In addition to his novels
exploring the American legal system, he is also the author of
The Code of Buddyhood, a literary coming-of-age novel
described by The West Coast Review of Books as "a
powerful and sophisticated novel about the nature of friendship."
Bernhardt has also edited an anthology of original short fiction
and has written a holiday novel, The Midnight Before Christmas.
Bernhardt has appeared
on CNN, CNBC, The Today Show, Nightline, and a
host of other national and regional television programs. His
books have been translated and published in more than a dozen
countries. He has twice received the Oklahoma Book Award for
Best Fiction, in 1995 and 1999. In 2000, he received OSU's H.
Louise Cobb Distinguished Author Award, which is given "in
recognition of an outstanding body of work that has profoundly
influenced the way in which we understand ourselves and American
society at large." That same year, he was presented with
a Career Achievement Award at the 2000 Booklovers Convention
in Houston. He has also been inducted into the Oklahoma Writers
Hall of Fame, the youngest author ever so honored.
In addition to
his work as a writer, Bernhardt is also the founder and owner
of HAWK Publishing Group, an independent publishing house headquartered
in Tulsa, Oklahoma. HAWK has published wide variety of new and
classic books by acclaimed authors including PBS newsman Jim
Lehrer, The Waltons creator Earl Hamner, actress Ronnie
Claire Edwards, Teresa Miller, Linda Phillips Ashour, and many
others.
Bernhardt obtained
his law degree at the University of Oklahoma College of Law,
worked as a trial lawyer at a large law firm for nine years,
and was repeatedly recognized for his pro bono work for
the underprivileged and for his work with teenagers interested
in law. The Oklahoma Bar Association presented him with a special
award for Outstanding Service to the Public, and in 1994 he was
named one of the top twenty young lawyers in the nation by the
American Bar Association's Barrister magazine.
In 1995, Bernhardt
served as President of Novelists Inc., a national coalition of
professional writers. He also serves on the Board of Directors
of the Tulsa Arts and Humanities Council, the Writers Advisory
Panel of the Oklahoma Arts Institute, and as chairman of the
Peggy V. Helmerich Literary Award Selection Committee.
Bernhardt's many
activities within and beyond the world of books have led OSU
to dub him "Oklahoma's Renaissance Man." Other
recent Bernhardt projects have included writing a mystery play
for an Arts and Humanities Council fundraiser, songwriting (he
plays the piano), creating a board game, producing a CD for the
musical group Dunstanfolk, and constructing crossword puzzles
for The New York Times and Games Magazine.
He lives in Tulsa with his wife, Kirsten, and their children,
Harry, Alice, and Ralph.
Bernhardt is known
as "the master of the courtroom drama" and has won
several awards for his work. Bernhardt has also received awards
for public service, and in 1993 was named one of the top 25 young
lawyers in the nation. He received the Oklahoma Book Award for
fiction in 1995 for Perfect Justice and again in 2000
for Dark Justice. He lives in Tulsa.
Silent Justice
Book Description from amazon.com
When a powerful
corporation is charged with dumping toxic chemicals into a community's
drinking water and killing innocent children, Ben Kincaid knows
the class action suit is a suicide mission. Facing off against
the small Kincaid staff is Tulsa's largest law firm. Challenging
Ben in the courtroom is the firm's fabled top gun--not to mention
a hot-headed judge with a notorious soft spot for big business.
But as Ben prepares for legal battle, a sadistic killer strikes.
With each gruesome murder, a terrifying connection is more deeply
drawn between Ben's quest for justice and another man's relentless
hunt for the spoils of his own private--and very dirty--war.
Read an exerpt.
Dark Justice
Book Description from amazon.com
With his nine dazzling
Ben Kincaid novels, author William Bernhardt has drawn acclaim
as a master of the courtroom drama who "throws in just enough
plot twists to foil most armchair detectives" (the Associated
Press). Now, in Dark Justice, the winner of the Oklahoma
Book Award continues to do exceptional justice to the legal thriller.
Suffering from
courtroom burnout, Ben Kincaid hopes to leave trials and the
tribulations of a lawyer's life behind in Tulsa as he sets out
for some much-needed R and R in the picturesque Pacific Northwest.
But Ben's blissful getaway becomes a busman's holiday in the
small town of Magic Valley, where a pitched battle between the
local logging industry and crusading conservationists has led
to brutal murder.
Years earlier,
professional activist George Zakin was successfully defended
against a charge of murder by a fledgling attorney named Ben
Kincaid. Now, accused of viciously killing a lumberjack, Zakin
is counting on Ben to duplicate that long-ago courtroom coup
and save his neck a second time. Ben has no doubt that his client
is innocent, but in a town where logging is a way of life, and
save-the-trees advocates are branded "eco-terrorists,"
he knows winning the case will be an uphill fight.
It doesn't help
that Ben's opponent is Rebecca Granville "Granny" Adams,
a homegrown prosecutor with a reputation for being as ruthless
as she is ravishing. With the odds stacked against him, Ben walks
into a war zone in the courtroom . . . and a potential killing
field in the streets and woods of Magic Valley, an explosive
place where allies and enemies are hard to tell apart--and digging
for the truth is as good as digging your grave.
Laced with sly wit and loaded with surprising twists, Dark Justice
makes another ironclad case for bestselling author William Bernhardt's
skills as a master of the brilliantly plotted, stunningly suspenseful
legal thriller.
Other books by William Bernhardt
 
You may email William
Bernhardt at willbern@mindspring.com
William
Bernhardt Online
http://www.williambernhardt.com/
Biography from Book Reporter
http://www.bookreporter.com/authors/au-bernhardt-william.asp
Interview at Writers Review
http://www.writersreview.com/authors/william_bernhardt.htm
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