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  1. Harold Robbins (May 21, 1916 – October 14, 1997) was an American author of popular novels. One of the best-selling writers of all time , he wrote over 25 best-sellers, selling over 750 million copies in 32 languages.

  2. Harold Robbins has 236 books on Goodreads with 72089 ratings. Harold Robbinss most popular book is The Carpetbaggers.

  3. Jul 3, 2019 · Seventeen years after his death, THR flips back the pages on Harold Robbins, the world’s most successful trashy book author — and one of the most debauched party-givers Hollywood has ever seen...

  4. Harold Robbins was one of the most prolific authors from The United States who used to write his books based on the literature & fiction genre. To date, his books have sold more than 750 million copies all across the globe.

  5. Oct 15, 1997 · Harold Robbins, a writer whose formula of sex, money and power made him one of the best-selling authors of his day, died yesterday at Desert Hospital in Palm Springs, Calif.

  6. Harold Robbins was an American author credited with popularizing a prurient style of mass-market fiction that traded on the public appetite for tales of profligate Hollywood stars and glamorous criminals.

  7. harold robbins (1916–1997) is one of the best-selling american fiction writers of all time, ranking 5th on the world’s best-selling fiction author list just behind william shakespeare and agatha christie.

  8. Oct 14, 1997 · Born as Harold Rubin in New York City, he later claimed to be a Jewish orphan who had been raised in a Catholic boys home. In reality he was the son of well-educated Russian and Polish immigrants.

  9. Oct 21, 2007 · But it’s uttered by the virile, easily riled Jonas Cord, the Howard Hughes stand-in at the center of “The Carpetbaggers,” Harold Robbins’s fabled 1961 novel — or novel-like object, anyhow.

  10. Writer and novelist. Worked as a grocery clerk, cook, cashier, errand boy, and bookies' runner, 1927-31; worked in food factoring business during 1930s; worked in the wholesale sugar trade; Universal Pictures, New York, NY, shipping clerk in warehouse, 1940-41, executive director of budget and planning, 1942-57. WRITINGS: NOVELS.

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