Donald Sobol was born in
The Bronx, New York City, to Ira J. and Ida (Gelula) Sobol. Ira Sobol owned a few
gas stations that eventually were sold.[1] Donald attended the NYC
Ethical Culture Fieldston School and then served for two years during World War II with the
Army Corps of Engineers in the Pacific Theatre. After the War Sobol graduated from
Oberlin College with a degree in English literature in 1948.
Career
Sobol's career began as a
copy boy for the New York Sun, and he eventually worked his way up to reporter. In 1949, he started work at the Daily News and remained there for two years. After a brief stint as a
buyer at
Macy's in New York, he moved to
Florida and started writing full-time.[3]
He started writing the syndicated series Two-Minute Mysteries in 1958, starring
criminologist Dr. Haledjian. It proved very popular and ran for more than ten years. In 1963, he started writing the Encyclopedia Brown series, featuring Leroy "Encyclopedia" Brown, a schoolboy who was an amateur sleuth. Compared with the Two-Minute Mysteries series, which features crimes as serious as
murder, the Encyclopedia Brown books are more juvenile-oriented, often dealing with matters such as pranks or
petty theft. Sobol's Encyclopedia Brown titles have never been out of print and have been translated into twelve languages. Sobol was rejected two dozen times before his first Encyclopedia Brown book was published.[4][1]
In 1975, the
Mystery Writers of America honored Sobol and his Encyclopedia Brown series with a Special
Edgar Award. The last book in the series penned by Sobol, Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Soccer Scheme, was published in October 2012, three months after the author's death.[1]
Sobol wrote the children's novel Secret Agents Four, in which a group of Miami teenagers attempt to thwart foreign saboteurs. Sobol also penned the non-fiction book True Sea Adventures, published in 1975.[5]
Sobol wrote more than 65 books. In addition to the books he wrote for children, Sobol also wrote a number of nonfiction books on topics ranging from US civil war history[6] to investing. He also wrote and contributed to magazines under a variety of
pen names. His manuscripts are stored at the
University of Minnesota, in the Kerlan Collection.
Personal life and final years
Sobol was married to Rose (née Tiplitz) who was both an engineer and author.[7] Sobol left behind three children: John, Eric and Diane as well as four grandchildren.[7] A fourth child, Glenn, died at age 23 in a car accident in 1983.[1]
Encyclopedia Brown Lends a Hand (1974,
ISBN0-553-48133-9, reissued as Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Exploding Plumbing and Other Mysteries,
ISBN0-590-44093-4)
Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Dead Eagles (1975,
ISBN0-590-43343-1)
Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Midnight Visitor (1977,
ISBN0-553-15586-5)