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American romance writer (b. 1950)

Nora Roberts

Nora Roberts, 2007

Nora Roberts, 2007

Born Eleanor Marie Robertson
(1950-ten-ten) Oct 10, 1950 (age 71)
Silverish Spring, Maryland, U.South.
Pen name Nora Roberts
J.D. Robb
Jill March
Sarah Hardesty
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Period 1981–present
Genre Romance, fantasy, suspense
Spouse

Ronald Aufdem-Brinke

(m. 1968; div. 1983)


Bruce Wilder

(m. 1985)

Children 2
Website
www.noraroberts.com

Nora Roberts (born Eleanor Marie Robertson on Oct 10, 1950) is an American author of more than 225 romance novels.[1] She writes equally J. D. Robb for the in Expiry series and has also written under the pseudonyms Jill March and for publications in the U.K. equally Sarah Hardesty.

Roberts was the first author to exist inducted into the Romance Writers of America Hall of Fame. Equally of 2011, her novels had spent a combined 861 weeks on The New York Times Best Seller listing, including 176 weeks in the number-i spot.

Life and career [edit]

Personal life [edit]

Early years [edit]

Roberts was built-in on October ten, 1950 in Silver Spring, Maryland, the youngest of five children.[2] Both of her parents have Irish ancestors, and she has described herself as "an Irishwoman through and through".[3] Her family were avid readers, so books were ever of import in her life.[four] Although she had e'er made upwardly stories in her head, Roberts did non write as a child, other than essays for schoolhouse. She does merits to accept "told lies. Really good ones—some of which my female parent nevertheless believes."[5] She attended a Cosmic school and credits the nuns with instilling in her a sense of discipline.[5] During her 2nd year in high school, Roberts transferred to a local public school, Montgomery Blair High School,[6] where she met her first husband, Ronald Aufdem-Brinke.[vii] They married, against her parents' wishes, in 1968, as soon as she had graduated from high school.[viii] [ix]

The newly married couple settled in Boonsboro, Maryland. Roberts' husband worked at his father's canvass-metal business before joining her parents in their lighting company. She gave birth to two sons, Dan and Jason. Roberts became a homemaker and would afterward refer to this fourth dimension menstruation as her "Earth Mother" years. Roberts spent much of her time doing crafts, including ceramics and sewing her children'south clothes.[8] Their union ended in divorce[10] in 1983.

Present [edit]

Roberts met her second husband, Bruce Wilder, a carpenter, when she hired him to build bookshelves in July 1985.[11] [12] Her husband owns and operates a bookstore in Boonsboro, Maryland called Turn the Folio Books.[xiii] He also works equally an adult content lensman and videographer.[fourteen]

The Wilders also owned the nearby historic Boone Hotel, which was undergoing renovations when it was destroyed past a fire in Feb 2008. It opened equally the Inn BoonsBoro in 2009; the suites were inspired by and named for literary romantic couples with happy endings.[15]

Roberts one time stated: "Y'all're going to exist unemployed if you really think you just have to sit down around and wait for the muse to land on your shoulder."[xvi] She concentrates on one novel at a time,[17] writing eight hours a twenty-four hour period, every 24-hour interval, even while on vacation.[9] Rather than brainstorm with an outline or plot summary, Roberts instead envisions a key incident, character, or setting.[xvi] She then writes a brusque first typhoon that has the basic elements of a story. After finishing the showtime draft, Roberts goes back to the beginning of the novel. The 2nd typhoon commonly sees the addition of details, the "texture and color" of the work, too every bit a more in-depth report of the characters. She then does a last pass to smoothen the novel before sending information technology to her agent, Amy Berkower.[18]

She oft writes trilogies, finishing the 3 books in a row so that she can remain with the same characters. When possible, she does the same with the in Death books, writing three in a row before returning to contemporary romances.[19] Her trilogies are all released in paperback, as Roberts believes the wait for hardcover editions is besides long for the reader.[4]

Roberts does much of her research over the Internet, equally she has an disfavor to flying.[ix]

She is an ardent baseball fan, having been honored past the local modest league baseball team Hagerstown Suns several times.[twenty]

Writing career [edit]

Beginning [edit]

She began to write during a blizzard in February 1979 while housebound with her two small-scale boys. Roberts states that with three feet of snowfall, a dwindling supply of chocolate, and no morning time kindergarten she had footling else to practise.[21] [22] While writing downward her ideas for the first fourth dimension, she fell in love with the writing procedure, and quickly produced six manuscripts.[23] She submitted her manuscripts to Harlequin, the leading publisher of romance novels, only was repeatedly rejected. Roberts says,

I got the standard rejection for the beginning couple of tries, then my favorite rejection of all fourth dimension. I received my manuscript back with a nice little annotation which said that my piece of work showed promise, and the story had been very entertaining and well washed. But that they already had their American writer. That would have been Janet Dailey.[24]

Dailey would keep to be embroiled in a plagiarism scandal in which she somewhen confessed to stealing some of Roberts' work.

Pseudonyms [edit]

Nora Roberts [edit]

In 1980, a new publisher, Silhouette books, formed to take advantage of the pool of manuscripts from the many American writers that Harlequin had snubbed.[25] Roberts found a home at Silhouette, where her starting time novel, Irish Thoroughbred, was published in 1981. She used the pseudonym Nora Roberts, a shortened course of her nascence name Eleanor Marie Robertson because she assumed that all romance authors had pen names.[8]

Betwixt 1982 and 1984, Roberts wrote 23 novels for Silhouette.[8] They were published under various Silhouette imprints: Silhouette Awareness, Silhouette Special Edition and Silhouette Desire, also as Silhouette Intrigue, and MIRA's reissue plan. In 1985, Playing the Odds, the commencement novel in the MacGregor family series, was published. The volume was an immediate bestseller.[8]

In 1987, she began writing single title books for Runted. Five years later she moved to Putnam to write single title hardcovers likewise as original paperbacks.[26] She reached the hardcover bestseller lists with her fourth hardcover release, 1996's Montana Sky. Roberts has continued to release single-title novels in paperback. She still occasionally writes shorter category romances. Her attachment to the shorter category books stems from her years every bit a young mother of two boys without much time to read, as she "[remembers] exactly what it felt like to want to read and not have time to read 200,000 words."[9]

Roberts and her career were featured in Pamela Regis' A Natural History of the Romance Novel. Regis calls Roberts "a master of the romance novel form, because she "has a keen ear for dialogue, constructs deft scenes, maintains a page-turning pace, and provides compelling label."[24] Publishers Weekly once talked well-nigh her "wry humor and the use of unlike narrators, two devices that were in one case rarities" in the romance novel genre.[9]

J. D. Robb [edit]

Roberts had long wanted to write romantic suspense novels in the vein of Mary Stewart, merely, at the urging of her agent, she full-bodied on classic contemporary romance novels while she congenital a following of readers.[9] Later on moving to Putnam in 1992, the publishing company rapidly realized that they were unable to keep upwards with Roberts'due south prolific output. They suggested that she prefer a second pseudonym so that they would be able to publish more of her work each year.[19]

Her agent, Amy Berkover, convinced the publishers to allow Roberts to write romantic suspense novels under the new proper name.[9] Her outset romantic suspense novel was published in 1995 under the pseudonym J. D. Robb. The initials "J. D." were taken from her sons, Jason and Dan, while "Robb" is a shortened form of Roberts. She offset decided to employ the pseudonym D. J. MacGregor, but correct earlier publication, she discovered that this pseudonym was used past another author.[21]

As J. D. Robb, Roberts has published a series of futuristic scientific discipline fiction police procedurals. These books, all function of the in Decease serial, characteristic NYPSD detective Eve Dallas and her husband Roarke and are set up in a mid-21st century New York Metropolis. Despite the emphasis on solving a crime in each of the books, the overall theme of the series is the development of the relationship between Eve and Roarke.[nineteen] When the in Death serial began, neither Roberts nor her publisher acknowledged that she was in fact the author. They hoped to allow the serial to stand on its own claim and build its ain post-obit.[27]

After publishing 18 novels in the in Decease series, Putnam published the nineteenth, Divided in Death, commencement in hardcover. The book became Roberts' first bestselling novel of 2004.[28]

As of March 2022, Roberts has published 54 novels plus ten novellas in the in Expiry serial.[29]

Other pseudonyms [edit]

Roberts wrote a story for a magazine titled "Melodies of Dear" under the pseudonym Jill March.[21] She has too been known every bit Sarah Hardesty. When the Born In serial was released in Uk it carried that name instead of Nora Roberts. She has since changed publishers.[21]

Success [edit]

In 1996, Roberts passed the hundred-novel mark with Montana Heaven and, in 2012, doubled that with The Witness. In both 1999 and 2000, iv of the five novels that USA Today listed equally the all-time-selling romance novels of the year were written by Roberts. Her first advent on The New York Times Bestseller List came in 1991,[17] and betwixt 1991 and 2001, she had 68 New York Times Bestsellers, counting hardbacks and paperbacks. The New York Times did non review whatsoever of those novels.[30] In 2001, Roberts had 10 best-selling mass-marketplace paperbacks, according to Publishers Weekly, non counting those books written under the J.D. Robb name. In September 2001, for the first time Roberts took the numbers 1 and 2 spots on the Publishers Weekly bestseller list, as her romance Time and Once again was number 1, and her J.D. Robb release Seduction in Death was number two.[31]

Since 1999, every i of Roberts's novels has been a New York Times bestseller, and 124 of her novels accept ranked on the Times bestseller list, including 29 that debuted in the number-one spot. Every bit of January 24, 2013, Roberts's novels had spent a combined 948 weeks on The New York Times Bestseller List, including 148 weeks in the number-one spot. Equally of Jan 9, 2009, 400 million copies of her books are in print, including 12 million copies sold in 2005 solitary. Her novels have been published in 35 countries.[32]

A founding member of the Romance Writers of America (RWA), Roberts was the first inductee in the organization'due south Hall of Fame.[nine] In 1997 she was awarded the RWA Lifetime Accomplishment Honor, which in 2008 was renamed the RWA Nora Roberts Lifetime Achievement Award.[33] As of 2012, she has won an unprecedented 21 of the RWA's RITA Awards, the highest laurels given in the romance genre.[34]

Two of Roberts' novels, Sanctuary and Magic Moments, had previously been fabricated into Tv set movies. In 2007, Lifetime Television adapted four Nora Roberts novels into Telly movies: Angels Autumn starring Heather Locklear, Montana Sky starring Ashley Williams, Blue Smoke starring Alicia Witt, and Carolina Moon starring Claire Forlani. This was the commencement fourth dimension that Lifetime had adapted multiple works by the aforementioned writer.[35] Four more films were released on four consecutive Saturdays in March and April 2009. The 2009 collection included Northern Lights starring LeAnn Rimes and Eddie Cibrian, Midnight Bayou starring Jerry O'Connell, Loftier Noon starring Emilie de Ravin, and Tribute starring Brittany Murphy.

Fourth dimension named Roberts i of their 100 Most Influential People in 2007, maxim she "has inspected, dissected, deconstructed, explored, explained and extolled the passions of the human heart."[36] Roberts was i of just two authors on the list, the other beingness David Mitchell.[36]

Victim of plagiarism [edit]

In 1997, another acknowledged romance writer, Janet Dailey, admitted to repeatedly plagiarizing Roberts' piece of work. The practice came to low-cal afterwards a reader read Roberts' Sweet Revenge and Dailey's Notorious back-to-back; she noticed several similarities and posted the comparable passages on the Internet. Calling the plagiarism "mind-boggling", Roberts sued Dailey.[9] Dailey acknowledged the plagiarism and attributed it to a psychological disorder. She admitted that both Aspen Gold and Notorious lifted heavily from Roberts' work. Both of those novels were pulled from print subsequently Dailey's admission.[37] [38] In Apr 1998, Dailey settled the case. Roberts donated the settlement to various literary causes including the Literacy Volunteers of America (now ProLiteracy).[9] [39] [40] [41]

Roberts joined the chorus strongly criticizing fellow romance writer Cassie Edwards, who had lifted many passages from much older sources (many in the public domain) without giving credit, forcing Edwards out of the business concern.[42] [43]

In 2019 Roberts, along with other authors, was a victim of plagiarism by Cristiane Serruya.[44] [45] [46]

Books [edit]

  • Vision in White
  • The Adjacent Ever
  • Year One
  • The Witness
  • Born in Fire
  • Bluish Dahlia
  • The Obsession
  • Dance Upon the Air
  • Jewels of the Dominicus
  • Body of water Swept

Charity [edit]

Roberts has been included repeatedly on the Giving Dorsum Fund'south annual lists of the most philanthropic celebrities, with the bulk of her donations going to the Nora Roberts Foundation.[47] [48] [49] The foundation financially supports organizations that promote literacy and the arts, aid children and engage in humanitarian efforts. The Foundation also endowed the Nora Roberts Center for American Romance at McDaniel College, which supports academic scholarship on the American romance novel, with special emphasis on the literary qualities and significance of the romance.[50] Roberts has fabricated other charitable efforts such every bit auctioning her jewelry.[51]

Works [edit]

Bibliography [edit]

Many of Roberts' novels have been, or volition exist, reissued. To avoid confusion, all of Roberts' new releases include a logo that is a circle with the initials "NR" within, indicating that the book has never been published before.[52]

Screen adaptations [edit]

  • Magic Moments (1989)
  • Sanctuary (2001)
  • Angels Autumn (2007)
  • Montana Sky (2007)
  • Blue Fume (2007)
  • Carolina Moon (2007)
  • Northern Lights (2009)
  • Midnight Bayou (2009)
  • High Apex (2009)
  • Tribute (2009)
  • Carnal Innocence (2011)
  • Brazen (2022)

Lifetime Moving picture Channel [edit]

Several of Roberts' books have been adapted into fabricated-for-TV movies and aired on Lifetime.

The 2007 Drove featured:

  • Angels Fall
  • Montana Heaven
  • Carolina Moon
  • Blue Smoke

The 2009 Drove featured:[53]

  • Northern Lights
  • Midnight Bayou
  • High Noon
  • Tribute

Peter Guber'southward Mandalay Idiot box and Stephanie Germain Prods. produced the eight adaptations.

Awards [edit]

As Nora Roberts [edit]

Gold Medallion awards [edit]

Golden Medallion awards were awarded by the Romance Writers of America.[54]

  • The Centre'due south Victory: 1983 Gold Medallion for Best Gimmicky Sensual Romance
  • Untamed: 1984 Gilded Medallion for Best Traditional Romance
  • This Magic Moment: 1984 Golden Medallion for All-time Gimmicky 65–eighty,000 words, shared with Deirdre Mardn's Destiny'due south Sweet Errand
  • Opposites Attract: 1985 Golden Medallion for Best Short Contemporary Romance
  • A Thing of Choice: 1985 Gilded Medallion for Best Long Contemporary Serial Romance
  • One Summertime: 1987 Gilt Medallion for Best Long Contemporary Series Romance
  • Brazen Virtue: 1989 Golden Medallion for Best Suspense
RITA Awards [edit]

RITA Awards are awarded by the Romance Writers of America.[54]

  • Dark Shift: 1992 RITA Honor for Best Romantic Suspense
  • Divine Evil: 1993 RITA Award for Best Romantic Suspense
  • Nightshade: 1994 RITA Laurels for Best Romantic Suspense
  • Individual Scandals: 1994 RITA Award for Best Contemporary Single Championship
  • Hidden Riches: 1995 RITA Accolade for All-time Romantic Suspense
  • Built-in in Ice: 1996 RITA Award for Best Gimmicky Single Title
  • Built-in in Ice: 1996 RITA Laurels for All-time Romance of 1995
  • Carolina Moon: 2001 RITA Award for All-time Romantic Suspense
  • Three Fates: 2003 RITA Award for Best Romantic Suspense
  • Retrieve When – Part ane: 2004 RITA Award for All-time Romantic Suspense
  • Birthright: 2004 RITA Award for All-time Contemporary Single Title
  • Tribute: 2009 RITA Award All-time Novel with Stiff Romantic Elements[55]
Quill awards [edit]

Quill awards are awarded by the Quills Foundation.[56]

  • Angels Fall: 2006 Book of the year
  • Angels Fall: 2006 Romance
  • Blue Smoke: 2007 Romance

As J.D. Robb [edit]

  • Survivor in Death: 2006 RITA Awards Romantic Suspense winner[57]
  • New York to Dallas: 2012 RITA Awards Best Romantic Suspense winner[55] [57]

Citations [edit]

  1. ^ Clark, Blanche (Nov thirty, 2010), "The $60 million adult female", Herald Sunday , retrieved December 6, 2010
  2. ^ Vernon, Cheril (July 22, 2007), "'Queen of Romance' still going strong", Palestine Herald-Press, archived from the original on January xi, 2013, retrieved August 8, 2007
  3. ^ Irish Times May 12, 2007
  4. ^ a b Weiner, Debbie (March 10, 2000). "Writer Nora Roberts". BookReporter. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  5. ^ a b House, Jeanny (Oct 1998). "Author Nora Roberts Oct 1998". BookReporter. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  6. ^ "Senior picture from Blair High School 1968 Silverlogue Yearbook". Itsallaboutfamily.com. Archived from the original on Feb 15, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2013.
  7. ^ Collins, Lauren. "Real Romance: How Nora Roberts became America's most pop novelist". The New Yorker. No. June 22, 2009. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c d east Kloberdanz, Kristin (March–April 2002). "Don't Write Off Romance: Thought You Could Dismiss It? Retrieve Once again: Meet Nora Roberts, the Queen of the Genre, Who Reigns over a Inverse Landscape". Book Mag. Archived from the original on July 11, 2007. Retrieved August 10, 2007.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Quinn, Judy (February 23, 1998), "Nora Roberts: A Commemoration of Emotions", Publishers Weekly, archived from the original on February viii, 2008, retrieved December 25, 2006
  10. ^ Bellafante, Ginia, (August 23, 2006) A Romance Novelist's Heroines Adopt Love Over Money, New York Times, retrieved Nov 26, 2014.
  11. ^ The Obsession. Trivia-On-Books. 2015.
  12. ^ Bellafante, Ginia (Baronial 23, 2006). "A Romance Novelist's Heroines Adopt Love Over Money". The New York Times. Not long into her career, Ms. Roberts divorced. Then, in 1985, she married a carpenter, Bruce Wilder. Mr. Wilder runs a bookstore that the couple bought near their home.
  13. ^ "Turn the Folio Bookstore". Ttpbooks.com. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  14. ^ "Bruce Wilder Photograph".
  15. ^ La Gorce, Tammy (April 29, 2010). "Maryland'southward Ceremonious War Country Seeks a Softer Side". The New York Times . Retrieved Apr 6, 2013.
  16. ^ a b Nuckols, Ben (August 22, 2006), "Nora Roberts, 9-to-5 storyteller: Her writing output and sales are huge, her work is routine", The Record (Bergen Canton, New Jersey), p. F07
  17. ^ a b Nuckols, Ben (Baronial 7, 2006). "For Romance Titan Roberts, Writing Novels is a 9-to-five Job". WTOP News. Archived from the original on October 10, 2007. Retrieved Baronial nine, 2007.
  18. ^ Gilt, Laurie; Linda Mowery (September 22, 1997). "Nora Roberts on her MacGregor Series". All About Romance. Archived from the original on Baronial 23, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  19. ^ a b c Schendel, Jennifer (Nov 15, 2001). "The Appeal of the Romance Serial". All Near Romance. Archived from the original on August 7, 2007. Retrieved August nine, 2007.
  20. ^ "Suns release 2007 promotional schedule". milb.com. April 2, 2007. Retrieved May 17, 2014.
  21. ^ a b c d Oftentimes Asked Questions and Answers from Nora Roberts, archived from the original on Feb 18, 2012, retrieved August 4, 2007
  22. ^ "Author Nora Roberts". Nora Roberts. Archived from the original on July xiv, 2007. Retrieved Baronial 4, 2007.
  23. ^ Elley, Karen Trotter (2002). "Nora Roberts deals with destiny in 3 Fates". Book Page. Archived from the original on August 13, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  24. ^ a b Regis, pages 183–184
  25. ^ Regis, p 159
  26. ^ Nora Roberts on writing, archived from the original on July 14, 2007, retrieved Baronial half dozen, 2007
  27. ^ Wehr, Isolde (April 2000). "Interview with Nora Roberts". Die Buecherecke Romantische. Archived from the original on July 5, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  28. ^ Maryles, Daisy (February 9, 2004), "Nora's Newbies", Publishers Weekly, archived from the original on September 29, 2009, retrieved August 9, 2007
  29. ^ "In Decease Serial by J.D. Robb". GoodReads . Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  30. ^ Regis, p 184.
  31. ^ Maryles, Daisy (September 10, 2001), "Roberts Scores with Mass Turnover", Publishers Weekly, archived from the original on September 28, 2009, retrieved August 9, 2007
  32. ^ "Did You Know?". Nora Roberts Official Website. March 21, 2013. Archived from the original on March 26, 2013. Retrieved March 21, 2013.
  33. ^ "RWA Nora Roberts Lifetime Achievement Award". Romance Writers of America. 2013. Archived from the original on September 20, 2014. Retrieved March 21, 2013.
  34. ^ "RITA Awards: Past Winners". Romance Writers of America. 2013. Archived from the original on July xiv, 2015. Retrieved March 21, 2013.
  35. ^ Andriani, Lynn (January 29, 2007), "Romance Blossoms Between Nora Roberts and Lifetime", Publishers Weekly, archived from the original on September 29, 2009, retrieved August nine, 2007
  36. ^ a b Holt, Karen (May 14, 2007), "Roberts, Mitchell Make Time's List", Publishers Weekly, archived from the original on September 28, 2009, retrieved August 9, 2007
  37. ^ Wilson, Jeff (July 30, 1997), "Romance novelist Janet Dailey apologizes for plagiarism", Pittsburgh Mail service-Gazette
  38. ^ Standora, Leo (August 27, 1997), "Romance Author Janet Dailey Sued", New York Daily News, archived from the original on August one, 2009, retrieved November xviii, 2008
  39. ^ "All About Romance: A 2001 Update in the Janet Dailey/Nora Roberts Plagiarism Case". Likesbooks.com. Archived from the original on November vi, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  40. ^ "All About Romance: A 2001 Update in the Janet Dailey/Nora Roberts Plagiarism Case". Likesbooks.com. Archived from the original on November 6, 2013. Retrieved Oct 31, 2013.
  41. ^ "Plagiarism paid for", The Victoria Advocate, Apr 17, 1998, archived from the original on May xiii, 2016, retrieved November 18, 2008
  42. ^ Tan, Processed; Wendell, Sarah (January 11, 2008). "A centralized certificate for the Cassie Edwards situation". Smart Bitches. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
  43. ^ Lundin, Leigh (May 11, 2008). "The Instance of the Purloined Prose". Scandal Sheets. Criminal Cursory. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
  44. ^ Time (mag)
  45. ^ León, Concepción de (Apr 24, 2019). "Nora Roberts Sues Brazilian Writer Who She Says Plagiarized Her Work". The New York Times.
  46. ^ "Nora Roberts files 'multi-plagiarism' lawsuit alleging author copied more than than forty authors". TheGuardian.com. Apr 25, 2019.
  47. ^ "The thirty Most Generous Celebrities". Forbes . Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  48. ^ Grey, Marker (January 14, 2013). "Oprah Winfrey, Nora Roberts, Meryl Streep Lead Celebrity Charity List". People.com . Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  49. ^ "Nora Roberts Foundation". norarobertsfoundation.org . Retrieved Apr 25, 2019.
  50. ^ "The Nora Roberts Middle for American Romance | McDaniel College". Mcdaniel.edu. Archived from the original on May 28, 2014. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  51. ^ "Interview: Nora Roberts talks about her passions - USATODAY.com". Books.usatoday.com. October 21, 2011. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  52. ^ Memmott, Carol (July 12, 2005), "Prolific Nora Roberts publishes 159th novel", USAToday, p. 04D
  53. ^ [one] Archived March 12, 2009, at the Wayback Car
  54. ^ a b Romance Writers of America: National Contests and Awards, archived from the original on September 27, 2007, retrieved November 15, 2007
  55. ^ a b RITA Awards: Past Winners, archived from the original on September eighteen, 2012, retrieved Nov 25, 2012
  56. ^ The Quill Awards , retrieved November 23, 2007
  57. ^ a b J. D. Robb, Fantastic Fiction, retrieved September 26, 2007

Full general sources [edit]

  • Little, Denise and Laura Hayden, The Official Nora Roberts Companion, Berkley Books, 2003, ISBN 0-425-18344-0.
  • Lennard, John, "Of Pseudonyms and Sentiment: Nora Roberts, J. D. Robb, and the Imperative Mood", in Of Modern Dragons and other essays on Genre Fiction (Tirril: Humanities-Ebooks, 2007), pp. 56–86. ISBN 978-1-84760-038-7
  • Regis, Pamela (2003), A Natural History of the Romance Novel, Philadelphia: Academy of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 183–184, ISBN0-8122-3303-4

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Official Uk website
  • Official J.D. Robb website
  • Official blog
  • Forum in Death—J.D. Robb Fan Forum
  • Memmott, Carol (February 11, 2009). "Nora Roberts' romantic inn". The states Today.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nora_Roberts

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