ABOUT
STEPHANIE
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Stephanie
Laurens originally began writing as an escape from the dry world of professional
science. Her hobby quickly became a career when her novels about the masterful
Cynster cousins captivated readers, making her one of the romance world's
most beloved and popular authors. She subsequently introduced the equally
unforgettable members of the Bastion Club. Currently living outside Melbourne,
Australia with her husband, two daughters and two cats, she has
been writing historical romance novels for more than 16 years
and is a New York Times, Publishers Weekly, Wall Street Journal and USA-Today
bestseller.
To date, Stephanie has published:
18 Regency-era Historical Romances,
all of 125,000 words, by Avon Books in North America and the other English-speaking
world markets. These are also gradually being published in Germany, Russia
and elsewhere. See the Booklist for more details.
8
British-style Regencies, all of 85,000 words, by Harlequin Mills &
Boon, originally in the United Kingdom, and subsequently in Germany, France,
and variously North America, Italy, Australia, Japan and Russia. See the
Regencies page for more details.
4 Novellas in Romance Anthologies, of 23-28,000 words, from St.
Martin's Press and Avon Books. See the Novellas page for more details.
Articles on aspects of the Regency in Romance. A few of these have
been gathered in the Library for your interest.
Following
is a brief autobiography of Stephanie's life before becoming a romance
novelist:
My early life was not all that ordinary - I was born in Ceylon (now Sri
Lanka) many years ago, at a time when the recently independent British
colony still behaved socially very much like an outpost of the British
Raj. So I know what "tiffin" is. It was a strange society -
one that has now died - but I still remember snippets.
At age 5, my family upped stakes and moved permanently to Melbourne, Australia,
where they've remained ever since. I did all my schooling in Melbourne,
finished university with a Ph.D. in Biochemistry, then moved on, together
with my husband, acquired along the way, to London.
Of course, we didn't just hop on a plane and fly. No. We took what proved
to be one of the last true overland journeys from Katmandu to London -
through northern India and the Ganges valley, up into Kashmir to laze
on houseboats on the lake at Srinigar, then through Pakistan and on up
the Khyber Pass into Afghanistan (pre-destruction). From Kabul, we continued
west, across Iran (then still with the Shah), down to Isfahan, then up
to the Caspian Sea, then all the way across Turkey to the ages-old fascination
of Istanbul. I still have the most vivid memories of Afghanistan, Iran
and Turkey - the most wonderfully dramatic and lonely scenery - places
where Nature really impinged on your consciousness. After wandering across
Europe, we eventually reached London, after what will undoubtedly rank
as the journey of our lives.
In London, I took up a position as a research scientist - and my husband
did, too. We lived in a lovely little cottage - a 16th century woodcutter's
cottage, complete with 16th century tiles (you can tell by the wooden
pegs that hold them on), built onto an oast house (those places with conical
roofs where they used to dry hops), surrounded on all sides by the lush
green fields of rural Kent. Of course, next door was the protected remains
of a 1st century Roman villa, and down the lane was a 14th century castle,
still owned by the original family. The main house was now mostly
Queen Anne in style, but with some Tudor buildings still remaining.
We spent 4 wonderful years living in England, touring England, France,
Spain, Portugal and northern Italy, entirely off the beaten track. Provincial
France became a favorite haunt; Portugal was a different sort of paradise.
On our return to Australia, we both continued on with scientific research
- in my case, in the cancer research field. I remained in cancer research,
rising through the ranks to heading my own laboratory...until fate took
a hand.
I had read romances since I was 13 - when my mother borrowed Georgette
Heyer's romances from a workmate, and I read them after her. These
Old Shades was the first one I read - I was hooked for life. In England,
I'd had the opportunity to stock up with Regency romances that were never
available in the US or Australia - I still have shelves of them. After
our return to Australia, one day I literally ran out of books to read.
I wanted a new Regency romance - but there were none in the stores. In
desperation, I decided to write one - something I'd always had a hankering
to do, but never done.
So I did. I just sat down and wrote the story, writing at night and on
weekends, primarily to entertain myself. To my surprise, being one of
those people who always have craft projects lying around unfinished for
years, I actually finished the book - mainly, I suspect, because I wanted
to know the end. But there it was - and it didn't seem too bad. Perhaps....
That first manuscript became TANGLED REINS, my first romance - a British
Regency romance published by Mills & Boon. Subsequently, I wrote 7
more Regency romances for Mills & Boon.
Somewhere along the line, I faced the fact that the life of a research
scientist, certainly at the level I had now reached, had palled. Stress
levels were too high. But I now had something else I could do - I could
write romances.
So I "retired" from scientific life, to more relaxed and fulfilling
endeavors, and at much the same time, crossed the Atlantic publishing-wise,
and, after some uncertain times, eventually signed on with Avon.
The rest, as they say, is history!
--Stephanie Laurens.

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