Janet Evanovich (born April 22, 1943, South River, New Jersey, U.S.) is an American novelist known for her mystery series featuring hapless smart-mouthed New Jersey bounty hunter Stephanie Plum.
Schneider was raised in a working-class family in South River, New Jersey. She studied painting at Rutgers University’s Douglass College, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in 1965. Having married mathematician Peter Evanovich the previous year, she joined him on his travels around the country while he worked for the U.S. Navy. She became a homemaker following the births of her two children. During that time she began writing stories—many of them erotic—and submitting them for publication. After a decade of abortive efforts to publish her tales, Evanovich had one of her romance novels accepted by Berkley Books for its Second Chance at Love imprint. The book was published as Hero at Large in 1987 under the pseudonym Steffie Hall. She subsequently churned out nearly a dozen similarly themed books before growing restive and turning an eye toward the mystery genre.
While casting about for concepts, Evanovich viewed the film Midnight Run (1988), which starred Robert De Niro as a bounty hunter. Intrigued, she spent two years researching bail bondsmen and law enforcement before setting to work on the story that became One for the Money (1994; television movie 2002; film 2012). The novel centred on Stephanie Plum—a gum-smacking Jersey girl—who blackmails her bail bondsman cousin into hiring her to track down bail jumpers (though she has never done so before). Aided by an eclectic cast of wisecracking friends and relatives, Plum sets off in hot pursuit of murder suspect—and former fling—Joe Morelli. Later entries in the cheeky series chronicle Plum’s further bungling attempts to track down criminals (often while juggling romantic crises). The series continued to grow in popularity, and ensuing volumes—among them Hot Six (2000), Twelve Sharp (2006), Notorious Nineteen (2012), Tricky Twenty-two (2015), Hardcore Twenty-four (2017), Twisted Twenty-six (2019), and Game On: Tempting Twenty-eight (2021)—became fixtures on the New York Times best-seller list. Evanovich also wrote several holiday-themed Plum novels, among them Visions of Sugar Plums (2002) and Plum Spooky (2009). She formed a company, Evanovich, Inc., to manage her output and publicity; it employed her husband and both of her children.
Evanovich’s winning formula—a sharp-tongued female protagonist aided in her madcap adventures by a smoldering unavailable man and a cadre of eccentrics—proved so successful that she deployed it with only minor variations in her other series. Her mysteries set in the NASCAR milieu—including Metro Girl (2004) and Motor Mouth (2006)—featured mechanic Alexandra Barnaby working alongside NASCAR driver Sam Hooker; the pair also appeared in several graphic novels. Evanovich’s supernatural mysteries—including Wicked Appetite (2010) and Wicked Charms (2015)—featured pastry chef Elizabeth Tucker and mysterious, supernaturally gifted Diesel, who first appeared in the Plum holiday novels. The Fox and O’Hare series, which was largely written with Lee Goldberg, centres on a female FBI agent and a dashing con artist; it began with The Heist (2013), and later installments included The Chase (2014), The Pursuit (2016), and The Bounty (2021). Evanovich also wrote Curious Minds (2016; with Phoef Sutton) and Dangerous Minds (2017), both of which centre on the crime-solving duo of Riley Moon and Emerson Knight.
Evanovich continued to write romances (with a coauthor), among them The Husband List (2013; with Dorien Kelly), a 19th-century tale of a rebellious American heiress. She also purchased the rights to her early efforts in the genre and sold them to another publishing company.
In addition, she penned a writer’s guide, How I Write: Secrets of a Bestselling Author (2006; with Ina Yalof).