Wilson was born on an Army air base in Tampa, Florida, where his doctor father served as a Captain in the Medical Corps. As World War Two ended, the family returned home to Southern California, where Wilson and his older sister grew up in Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach, California, southwest of Los Angeles. Their parents divorced in 1950 and they were raised by their mother, a high school English teacher, who later remarried. In 1963, Wilson graduated from
Mira Costa High School, where his wrestling coach, Jack Fernandez, encouraged him to pursue writing as a possible career, a path Wilson had not previously considered. At age 19, after dropping out of Michigan State University, Wilson broke into reporting as a sports correspondent for a local newspaper, the
South Bay Daily Breeze. Summer reporting jobs at other newspapers followed after he enrolled at
San Diego State College (now University), where he was an award-winning reporter and columnist for the campus newspaper. Along the way, he took his first fiction-writing classes, sold his first magazine pieces, and served as captain of the wrestling team. In 1968, he graduated with a B.A. in journalism, continuing his newspaper work while freelancing for small magazines. In 1970, he founded
Easy Reader, an alternative
community paper in
Hermosa Beach, California, that he later passed on to Kevin Cody, the current publisher. In 2020, Wilson touched on the paper's origins in an essay celebrating ''Easy Reader's'' 50th anniversary. In 1972, he relocated to Venice Beach, came out as a gay man and became active in the burgeoning LGBT movement. Twenty years later he settled in West Hollywood, the eventual setting for his Benjamin Justice mysteries. He married his longtime companion, artist Pietro Gamino, in 2013. == Print journalism and TV work ==