✍️ Author Biography
Christopher Robbins
🌍 American
📚 1 free book
⭐ Known for: Practical Demonkeeping (1992)
Christopher Moore is an American author known for his humorous novels often featuring supernatural elements and recurring characters.
Born in Toledo and raised in Ohio, Christopher Moore developed a love for reading and writing at a young age, eventually deciding to pursue a career as an author. He attended Ohio State University and the Brooks Institute of Photography. Moore's writing is characterized by ordinary characters navigating extraordinary or supernatural situations, with many of his books existing within a shared universe where characters can reappear. Despite film rights being sold for his works, none have yet been adapted into movies.
Moore has cited a diverse range of authors as influences, including Kurt Vonnegut, Douglas Adams, H.P. Lovecraft, and Edgar Allan Poe. He lived on Kauai for a time before settling in San Francisco. His bibliography includes numerous novels, often grouped into series like the 'Pine Cove' series, 'A Love Story' series, and 'Death Merchant Chronicles', though many can be read independently.
Literary Style and Themes
Christopher Moore's novels are recognized for their distinctive blend of humor and the supernatural, often placing relatable, 'everyman' characters into bizarre and extraordinary circumstances. A significant aspect of his work is the interconnectedness of his fictional universe. With a few exceptions, his books share the same setting, allowing characters to make recurring appearances, sometimes as central figures and other times in brief cameos. This creates a rich tapestry that rewards readers familiar with his broader body of work, while still allowing for standalone enjoyment of individual titles.
Creative Influences and Career Beginnings
Moore's formative years were marked by a deep immersion in literature, fueled by a childhood passion for reading and an early start in writing around age twelve. This early dedication led him to recognize his talent and consider writing as a profession by his teenage years. His literary inspirations are wide-ranging, drawing from authors such as Kurt Vonnegut, Douglas Adams, H.P. Lovecraft, and Edgar Allan Poe, whose styles and thematic explorations likely informed his unique narrative approach. The film rights to his debut novel, 'Practical Demonkeeping', were acquired by Disney even before its publication, hinting at the early appeal of his imaginative stories.
Key Ideas
- Ordinary characters facing supernatural or extraordinary events
- Shared fictional universe with recurring characters across novels