A fine arts major, Diamond turned to professional writing in his late twenties and is best known for books such as The Haven, Lady of the Haven, The Thief of Kalimar, Black Midnight, Forest Wars, Marrakesh, Samarkand, and Samarkand Dawn. He soon turned to other genres; including historical fiction, thrillers, and later a true story of a Holocaust survivor's family during World War II, Maybe You Will Survive. Several of his early novels were published in the UK by Methuen and much of his work by Endeavour Press and Venture Press in UK. Under the pen name Rochelle Leslie, he authored Tears of Passion, Tears of Shame, a novel of South Africa set during the Zulu War of 1879 which was subsequently published in Italy, titled, Venuto De Lontano, by Mondadori. He also has had various short stories published in anthologies. His satire book, Chocolate Lenin, was released in 2012. It is speculative fiction, a well received satire/fantasy of near-future Russia, parodying contemporary science, technology, and politics. It received numerous favorable reviews. A new site, GrahamDiamondwriter.com, now provides information about him and all of his books. In 2013 it was announced that his first novel, The Haven,was re-released in a new oversize format. The book is widely considered to be a cult classic. It was previously published in UK and Australia, as well as the United States. Many of his novels remain in print and digital and kindle format. In total Diamond has more than 1,000,000 copies of his books in print. In 2015 it was announced that Venture Press Ltd, UK, a division of Endeavour Press UK, in the autumn of 2015 made available seven of Graham Diamond's earlier titles, The Haven,Samarkand,Samarkand Dawn,Lady of the Haven,Dungeons of Kuba,The Falcon of Eden and The Beasts of Hades. They will be released in e-book format in the UK, United States, Canada, and across the English-speaking world. The Haven, and Samarkand, were particularly well received. In 2016, mainstream Endeavour Press published Black Midnight, a terrorist novel set in New York City, and Cry For Freedom, a well-received novel set during the Zulu War in Natal in 1879. In early 2018 Endeavour next released Maybe You Will Survive the true story of a Holocaust survivor Venture Press then announced that another six of Diamond's speculative fiction/fantasy novels would be published. Titles include, The Thief of Kalimar,, Captain Sinbad, a broad tongue-in-cheek account of the mariner's adventures, Chocolate Lenin, Diamond's humorous view of our current world of technology, science, and greed. In addition, Marrakesh, and Marrakesh Nights, Cinnabar, were also made available. In all, Graham Diamond has had more than one million books printed in hardcover, trade paperback, and paperback form. Digital copies have dramatically increased that number. Diamond also worked for many years at the New York Times as production manager in Editorial Art until leaving to pursue a full-time career in writing. He has taught and lectured on creative writing in both New York and California. He now makes his home in New York City. He continues his writing, citing he will 'never retire'. His personal website is, GrahamDiamondwriter.com