Presidents and spies wanted to know his secrets. Millions of eager readers snapped up his tales of military espionage. But to friends like WCCO anchor Frank Vascellaro, he was "just Vinny from St. Paul."
Twin Cities author Vince Flynn, who overcame dyslexia and various disappointments to conquer the bestseller lists, died Wednesday after a 2½-year battle with prostate cancer. He was 47.
His fans included former president Bill Clinton and then-president George W. Bush, who summoned him twice for private audiences. "He wanted to know where I got my information," Flynn said afterward.
His thrillers, centered on a CIA-trained assassin, captured the essence of the war on terror. All told, his 14 books have sold more than 15 million copies in the United States. A movie based on his recent novel "American Assassin" is in the works at CBS Films, with Bruce Willis signed on as co-star.
That success is even more impressive considering Flynn was diagnosed with dyslexia as a child.
"The last thing I ever thought I'd be then is a writer," he once told the Star Tribune.
A self-made success
Born the fifth of seven children to a St. Paul teacher and a wildlife artist, Flynn graduated from the University of St. Thomas in 1988 with an economics degree. After a couple of years in sales with Kraft General Foods, he became an aviation candidate for the U.S. Marine Corps, but was discharged due to concussions and seizures he'd had in childhood.
Supporting himself by bartending at night, he began writing his first novel in the mid-1990s, partly to help combat his dyslexia. After receiving more than 60 rejection letters from publishers, he self-published "Term Limits" in 1997, with help from a group of investors. It sold well locally, and he was picked up by Simon & Schuster — one of the firms that had rejected him. It wound up becoming a national bestseller (and his investors eventually got about a 500 percent return).