During
World War II, Diehl lied about his age to join the
U.S. Army Air Corps at 17, serving as a
ball turret gunner on a
B-24 Liberator where he flew 24 missions over Germany. He was the recipient of the
Distinguished Flying Cross, the
Purple Heart and the
Air Medal with three
oak leaf clusters. Diehl often cited his experiences during the war as a strong influence on his fiction. Diehl was also a successful photographer and journalist, when he began his novel-writing career at 50. His first novel, ''Sharky's Machine'', was made into the 1981 film of the
same name, directed by and starring
Burt Reynolds. Diehl saw it being shot on location in and around his hometown of
Atlanta, Georgia. It was the most successful box-office release of a film directed by Reynolds. Diehl relocated to
St. Simons Island, Georgia, in the early 1980s, and lived there for the next 15 years before returning to Atlanta. While living on St. Simons, he completed eight other novels, including
Primal Fear, which was adapted into the 1996
film of the same name. ==Death==