LOS ANGELES, CA -- Jackie Collins, the bestselling author of dozens of novels including "Hollywood Wives" that dramatized the lives of the rich and treacherous, died Saturday.
Collins died of breast cancer in Los Angeles, publicist Melody Korenbrot told The Associated Press. She was 77.
"She lived a wonderfully full life and was adored by her family, friends and the millions of readers who she has been entertaining for over 4 decades," Collins family said in a statement. "She was a true inspiration, a trail blazer for women in fiction and a creative force. She will live on through her characters but we already miss her beyond words."
Unlike her older sister Joan Collins, the "Dynasty" actress who was part of the 1980s Hollywood glitterati, Jackie Collins chose to document LA lives in her pulpy, page-turning fiction.
Collins wrote what she knew, and that meant stories of sex, glamour, power and more sex, a lot more sex. She began her literary career telling more than some wanted to hear, and eventually became the kind of author from whom readers could never get enough, providing a precursor to the culture of "Desperate Housewives" and "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills."
Collins told The Associated Press in a 2011 interview that she "never felt bashful writing about sex."
"As a writer, you can never think about who is going to read your books. Is it going to be my mom? My children? A lot of people say to me, 'Oh, I read your books under a cover with a flashlight when I was really young and I learned everything I know about sex from you.' ... I think I've helped people's sex lives. Sex is a driving force in the world so I don't think it's unusual that I write about sex. I try to make it erotic, too."
Born Jacqueline Jill Collins in London in 1937, her first novel, "The World is Full of Married Men," was a story of sex and show business set in "Swinging London" in the mid-1960s. It came out in 1968 and became a scandalous best-seller, banned in Australia and condemned by romance writer Barbara Cartland.
"Barbara Cartland said to me, 'Oh, Miss Collins, your books are filthy and disgusting and you are responsible for all the perverts in England,'" Collins told Porter Magazine in 2014. "I pause for a few moments and said, 'Thank you.'"
Collins followed in the 1970s with books like "The World is Full of Divorced Women" and "Lovers & Gamblers."
By the 1980s, she had moved to Los Angeles and turned out the 1983 novel she is still best known for, "Hollywood Wives," which has sold more than 15 million copies at the same time that her sister hit the height of her own fame on "Dynasty."
"Dynasty" producer Aaron Spelling would also produce the 1985 hit TV miniseries of "Hollywood Wives," which featured Candice Bergen, Angie Dickinson and Suzanne Somers among others.
It led to follow-ups like "Hollywood Husbands" (1986), "Hollywood Kids" (1984) and Hollywood Wives: The New Generation (2001).
The book made Jackie Collins a celebrity in her own right, and she loved the part, looking, living and behaving more like an actress than an author. In many ways her own persona was her greatest character.
Collins embraced Twitter in her later years, and loved the engagement with her over 150,000 followers.
"I love tweeting. I have so much fun with my fans," she told the AP in 2011. "I've asked them for reviews. I answer people's questions. Sometimes I'll do a little survey and say, 'Who is hot this week?'"
Her books didn't stick strictly to Hollywood, writing a series of mafia novels documenting the lives of the Santangelo family, focusing on its patriarch Gino and his daughter Lucky. She wrote nine novels based on her family including her last, "The Santangelos," published this year.
Collins told People magazine, which first reported her death Saturday, in her final interview Sept. 14 that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer over six years ago, but had chosen to keep the news among family, confiding mainly in her three daughters, 54-year-old Tracy, 48-year-old Tiffany and 46-year-old Rory.
"Looking back, I'm not sorry about anything I did," she told the magazine.
Collins was married twice, the second time to art gallery and nightclub owner Oscar Lerman in 1965. Lerman died in 1992. She was then engaged to Los Angeles businessman Frank Calcagnini, who died in 1998 before they were married.
Asked by the AP in 2011 if she was dating anyone, Collins said "I have a man for every occasion."
"When I was a kid growing up, I used to read my father's Playboy and I'd see these guys and they had fantastic apartments and cars," she said. "I have all of that now. Why would I want to hook myself up with one man when I've had two fantastic men in my life? One was my husband for over 20 years and one was my fiance for six years."