Robert Stone (born August 21, 1937, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died January 10, 2015, Key West, Florida) was an American author of fiction about individuals in conflict with the decaying late 20th-century Western societies in which they live.
Stone served in the U.S. Navy before attending New York (1958–59) and Stanford (1962–64) universities. He wrote advertising copy and newspaper articles and became friends with such writers as Jack Kerouac and Ken Kesey. A Hall of Mirrors (1967), his first novel, revolves around a right-wing radio station in New Orleans and its chaotic “Patriotic Revival”; Stone adapted the book for the screenplay of the film WUSA (1970). His second novel, Dog Soldiers (1974), concerns the legacy of corruption of the Vietnam War. It won the 1975 National Book Award, and Stone cowrote the screenplay for the film adaptation, Who’ll Stop the Rain (1978).
In the late 1970s Stone visited Central America, the setting of his novel A Flag for Sunrise (1981), about four individuals in a corrupt poverty-stricken country ripe for revolution. Children of Light (1986) features a debauched screenwriter and a schizophrenic actress, both in decline. Stone’s fifth novel, Outerbridge Reach (1992), was a well-received story of a foundering marriage and an around-the-world sailboat race. Later works by Stone include Helping (1993), Bear and His Daughters: Stories (1997), Damascus Gate (1998), and Fun with Problems (2010). His final work, Death of the Black-Haired Girl (2013), is a psychological thriller.