Louis L’Amour (born March 22, 1908, Jamestown, N.D., U.S.—died June 10, 1988, Los Angeles, Calif.) was an American writer, best-selling author of more than 100 books, most of which were formula westerns that were highly popular because of their well-researched portrayals of frontier life.
L’Amour, who left school at the age of 15, was a world traveler who mined in the West, sailed aboard an East African schooner, lived with bandits in Tibet, and worked as an elephant handler, a professional boxer, and a fruit picker before embarking on a career as a writer in the 1940s. Since “L’Amour” seemed an unlikely name for an author of westerns, he used pseudonyms until his novel Hondo (1953) became a successful motion picture starring John Wayne (1954), prompting L’Amour to write under his own name. His books sold 200 million copies in 20 languages, and at least 30 of his books formed the basis of films, including Kilkenny (1954), Guns of the Timberland (1955), The Burning Hills (1956), and How the West Was Won (1963). In 1983 he became the first novelist to receive a Congressional Gold Medal, and in the following year he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. His autobiography, Education of a Wandering Man, was published posthumously in 1989.