About the Author
Arthur Hailey (1920–2004), the author of
eleven novels, many of which became #1 New York Times
bestsellers, was born in Luton, England. He served as a pilot and
flight lieutenant in the British Royal Air Force during World War
II and immigrated to Canada in 1947. While working for a
transportation trade magazine, he scored his first writing success
with a television drama, and began to write screenplays full-time
for various networks during the golden age of live television. His
novel-writing career took off in 1959 with the publication of his
first novel, The Final Diagnosis, and picked up velocity
with Hotel and then Airport, which spent thirty weeks
in the number-one spot on the New York Times bestseller list
and became a blockbuster film. Hailey’s novels, many of which have
been made into films, television series, and miniseries, have been
translated into forty languages. They are notable for their
suspenseful storylines and authentic depictions of various
industries and commercial settings, which Hailey aggressively and
meticulously researched.