Eric Van Lustbader's first novel, The Sunset Warrior, was published in 1975. Since then, he has published more than twenty five best-selling novels, including The Ninja in which he introduced Nicholas Linnear, one of modern fiction's most beloved and enduring heroes. His novels have been translated into over twenty languages; his books are bestsellers worldwide and are so popular whole sections of bookstores from Bangkok to Dublin are devoted to them.

He was born and raised in Greenwich Village, where he developed an interest in art as well as in writing. He lived downstairs from the young Lauren Bacall and built orange-crate racers in Washington Square Park with Keith and David Carradine. He is a graduate of Columbia College, with a degree in Sociology, but his real education came much earlier at The City & Country School where, as Mr. Lustbader, is fond of saying, “I learned all the important lessons that would stay with me for life.”

Before turning to writing full time, he enjoyed highly successful careers in the New York City public school system where he holds licenses in both elementary and early childhood education, and in the music business where he worked for Elektra Records and CBS Records among other companies. He was the first writer in the US to write about Elton John and to predict his success. As a consequence, he, Elton and Elton's lyricist Bernie Taupin became friends. Writing for Cash Box Magazine, he also predicted the successes of such bands as Santana, Roxy Music, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, David Bowie, and The Who, among others. He wrote and field-produced a segment on Elton John for NBC-TV's "Nightly News," the first special the show had ever done on an entertainer of any kind.

He is also the author of two successful and highly regarded major fantasy series, The Pearl, published by Tor Books in the US and HarperCollins/Voyager in the UK and The Sunset Warrior Cycle. He is the author of a number of short stories, screenplays and novellas. Three of the short stories appeared in 1999: "Hush," in Off The Beaten Path: Stories of Place for Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, "Slow Burn," in Murder And Obsession for Delacourt Press, and "An Exultation of Termagants" in the millennial supernatural mega-collection 1999 for Avon Books. A short novel, "Art Kills" was published in 2000 by Carroll & Graf.

In addition, Mr. Lustbader wrote and created the story-boards for the highly successful DC Comics graphic novel, "Batman: The Last Angel," one of the only graphic novels to be offered by the Quality Paperback Book Club.

His latest internationally bestselling thriller, The Bourne Legacy, published in May, 2004 by St. Martin’s Press, continues and updates the adventures of Robert Ludlum’s famous international assassin. It spent six weeks on the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal bestseller lists.

Eric Van Lustbader serves on the Board of Trustees, the Executive Committee, and is Chair of the Strategic Planning Committee of the City & Country School in Greenwich Village. He also tends his prized collection of Japanese maples and beech trees (which have been written up in The New York Times and Martha Stewart's Living). He is a Second-Level Reiki master. He listens to music constantly and is ever on the lookout for new bands and artists. He and his wife Victoria live in New York City and the South Fork of Long Island.