Fay Faron first came into the national conscienceless in 1982 when she founded The Rat Dog Dick Detective Agency in San Francisco. In 1991, her advice column, “Ask Rat Dog,” was syndicated by King Features, leading to appearances on virtually every major TV talk & news show of the decade, including Oprah (3 times), Larry King Live and Good Morning America.
Faron has authored three books (“Missing Persons” & “Rip-off,” published by Writer’s Digest; and the self-published, “A Nasty Bit of Business”) and been the subject of “Hastened to the Grave,” a true crime by Edgar award-winning author, Jack Olsen. In 2001, Faron sold her detective agency and moved to Louisiana, where she was named “Ferrygodmother of New Orleans” in 2016 for saving the local ferry system. In 2020, she was awarded Marquis Who’s Who Lifetime Achievement Award” for her investigative endeavors and community activism. |
1949: faybabyRaised in the safe, protective bubble of the 1950s, free-spirited “good girl,” Fay Faron, thumbs her nose at her generation’s expectation that she marry and procreate, instead taking off for a madcap life of travel, adventure and romance.
Fay soon learns that navigating her way through the promiscuous world of the 1970s will take a set of skills her Sunday school teacher never taught her. Powering through a series of revenge plagues rained down from The Almighty—Hey, she is breaking ALL the rules, after all—Fay must learn to recreate herself or abandon her road-trip-as-a-lifestyle existence and retreat to the soul-crushing community from which she escaped. Faybaby, a memoir based on a true story is that tale. 1993: rat dog dickFay Faron lived 25 years in San Francisco, never marrying. The sinking of her Sausalito houseboat in 1982 birthed a new business, The Rat Dog Dick Detective Agency, when she tasked herself with finding the “Breatharian” renter who lived in her boat for the two years prior.
Faron’s advice column, “Ask Rat Dog” was syndicated by King Features in 1992, appearing in over 60 newspapers including The Chicago Sun Time, The Dallas Morning News and The San Jose Mercury News. She has appeared on Oprah Winfrey, Larry King Live, and 20/20, and her cases have been profiled in People magazine, Vanity Fair, U.S.A. Today and in Edgar award-winning Jack Olsen’s true crime, Hastened to the Grave. 2006: ferrygodmother
In 2001, Fay moved to New Orleans, settling in historic Algiers Point, directly across the Mississippi River from the French Quarter. In 2012, the City Council named her, “Ferrygodmother of New Orleans,” for saving the Canal Street ferry, and in 2019, she was awarded a Marquis Who’s Who’s Lifetime Achievement Award for her investigative career.
Today, Fay spends her time writing, traveling, and tooling around on “Hog,” her Honda Passport 50cc scooter. Her family consists of her long-time California friends who visit on a regular basis, along with the New Orleans ones who feel free to enter her home at will. In June of 2023, she married for the first time - AT 74! - to her old boyfriend from the 1970s and 1990s. |
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