Gillian Flynn was born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri. The child of professor parents, Flynn was shy as a young girl and retreated into the world of books and writing. After receiving degrees from the University of Kansas and the prestigious Northwestern University, Flynn worked for years as a journalist and television critic, all the while penning her own stories in her spare time. With the publication of her critically acclaimed debut novel,
Sharp Objects, in 2006, Flynn established herself as a major voice in the literary world. The themes and ideas she explored in her first book—violence, abuse, secrets and lies, and the false idea of the “innately good” woman—would go on to make her third novel,
Gone Girl, a riotous bestseller and a veritable literary phenomenon. The novel sold two million copies in its first year and went on to be translated into forty languages, adapted into a major motion picture, and hailed as one of the most shocking novels in contemporary literature. Flynn currently resides in Chicago with her husband and two children, and has written the screenplay adaptations for both
Gone Girl and the ITV series
Widows.