Julie Garwood


Julie Garwood is an American writer of over twenty-seven romance novels in both the historical and suspense subgenres. Over thirty-five million copies of her books are in print, and she has had at least 24 New York Times Bestsellers. She has also written a novel for young adults called A Girl Named Summer.
Garwood's novel For the Roses was adapted for the television feature Rose Hill.

Biography

Julie Garwood was raised in Kansas City, Missouri, the sixth of seven children in a large Irish family. She has five sisters: Sharon, Kathleen, Marilyn, Mary Colette "Cookie", and Joanne, and one brother: Tom. After having a tonsillectomy at age six, because she missed so much school, she did not learn to read as the other children her age did. She was eleven before her mother realized Garwood was unable to read. A math teacher, Sister Elizabeth, devoted the entire summer that year to teaching Garwood how to read, and how to enjoy the stories she was reading. This teacher had such an impact on Garwood's life that she named her daughter Elizabeth.
While studying to be an R.N., Garwood took a Russian history course and became intrigued by history, choosing to pursue a double major in history and nursing. A professor, impressed by the quality of her essays, convinced Garwood to write. The result was a children's book, A Girl Named Summer, and her first historical novel, Gentle Warrior.
She married young and had three children: Gerry, Bryan, and Elizabeth. The family resides in Leawood, Kansas. Although Garwood enjoyed her writing, she was not intending to pursue a career as an author. As a young wife and mother she took several freelance writing jobs, and wrote longer stories to amuse herself. After her youngest child started school, Garwood began attending local writers' conferences, where she soon met an agent. The agent sold both her children's book and her historical novel, and soon the publisher requested more historical romances.
Garwood's novels are particularly known for the quirkiness of her heroines, who tend to have an ability to get lost anywhere, clumsiness, and a "charming ability to obfuscate and change the direction of conversations to the consternation, frustration, but eventual acceptance of the other party." She is not afraid to tackle difficult issues, and one of her books deals with spousal abuse.
Despite her success in the historical romance genre, Garwood ventured into a new genre and began writing contemporary romantic suspense novels. Like her historicals, these contemporaries still focus on family relationships, whether between blood relatives or groups of friends who have styled themselves as a family.
Her first contemporary offering, Heartbreaker, was optioned for film and was serialized in Cosmopolitan magazine.

As Emily Chase

The Girls of Canby Hall series

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As Julie Garwood

Young Adult

  1. The Lion's Lady 12/1988
  2. Guardian Angel 05/1990
  3. The Gift 01/1991
  4. Castles 07/1993

    Lairds' Brides Series

  5. The Bride 07/1989
  6. The Wedding 04/1996

    Highlands' Lairds Series

  7. The Secret 05/1992
  8. Ransom 09/1999
  9. Shadow Music 12/2007

    Clayborne of Rosehill Series

  10. For The Roses 02/1995
  11. One Pink Rose 06/1997
  12. One White Rose 07/1997
  13. One Red Rose 08/1997
  14. Come The Spring 12/1997

    Buchanan/FBI Series

  15. Heartbreaker 08/2000
  16. Mercy 09/2001
  17. Killjoy 09/2002
  18. Murder List 08/2004
  19. Slow Burn 08/2005
  20. Shadow Dance 12/2006
  21. Fire and Ice 12/2008
  22. Sizzle 12/2009
  23. The Ideal Man 08/2011
  24. Sweet Talk 08/2012
  25. Hotshot 06/2013
  26. Fast Track 02/2014
  27. Wired 05/2017