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  • BEA 2016: Brunonia Barry: Salem Still Has Witches

    “History casts a long shadow here,” says Brunonia Barry of Salem, Mass., the town where her family has lived since the 1630s and the place where she has set all three of her novels, the New York Times bestselling The Lace Reader, The Map of True Places, and The Fifth Petal (Crown, Jan. 2017).

  • BEA 2016: Jennifer Chiaverini: Booth and the Women Who Loved Him

    The average person today thinks of John Wilkes Booth, the actor who shot President Lincoln in 1865, only as an assassin. But he was also a handsome actor with adoring fans, as well as a family man.

  • BEA 2016: Kristina Riggle: A Novel of Note

    Kristina Riggle was inspired to write "Vivian in Red" (Polis, Sept.), a multigenerational story with a family mystery, after her agent urged her to expand her horizons from the usual short time-line focus on a particular family or small town.

  • BEA 2016: Meg Little Reilly: Tackling Big Issues

    Meg Little Reilly describes herself as a “writer, environmentalist, quilter, aspiring banjo player, hiker of mountains and swimmer of lakes.”

  • BEA 2016: Marie Benedict: Einstein’s Family Helper

    The first Einstein is Albert. The “other” Einstein is Mileva Maric, the first wife of the famous physicist, whose role in helping to formulate the special theory of relativity in 1905 has been speculated on, but never really known—with the truth mostly lost to history.

  • BEA 2016: Michael Schumacher: Life and Death on the Great Lakes

    Michael Schumacher doesn’t know why he is so fascinated with the Great Lakes, but it’s been a lifelong passion.

  • BEA 2016: Rabbi Evan Moffic: A Jewish Spin on the Christian Jesus

    Rabbi Evan Moffic’s first book, "What Every Christian Needs to Know About Passover" (Abingdon, 2015), prompted enough questions from Christians and Jews alike that the rabbi knew it was time for a second.

  • BEA 2016: Beth Macy: An Untold Story

    Beth Macy, the author of the New York Times bestseller Factory Man, is known for writing about marginalized people and outsiders.

  • BEA 2016: David Unger: The Corruption Virus

    David Unger’s "The Mastermind" is a novel loosely based on the hard-to-believe true story of Rodrigo Rosenberg, a Guatemalan attorney, who, in 2009, planned his own assassination.

  • BEA 2016: Stacey Kade: Survivor Tale

    On the morning of September 11, 2001, Stacey Kade, working as a copywriter in a Chicago area insurance company, noticed her colleagues gathered around the television in their media center. She joined them as the horrors at the World Trade Center unfolded.

  • BEA 2016: Affinity Konar: Working Through Pain

    Affinity Konar’s new novel, "Mischling" (Sept.), her debut with Little, Brown, follows what was a years-long writing journey.

  • BEA 2016: Amy Krouse Rosenthal: Reader Participation

    There’s almost nothing typical about Amy Krouse Rosenthal’s latest book.

  • BEA 2016: Christine Sneed: Stories Living a New Life

    Christine Sneed’s new story collection, The Virginity of Famous Men (Bloomsbury, Sept.), has been with her for a while. She first wrote a (different) story with that title about 12 years ago, but decided it wasn’t good enough.

  • BEA 2016: Noah Hawley: Always Write

    As writer and television producer Noah Hawley puts it, with Emmy, Golden Globe, PEN, Critics Choice, and Peabody Awards under his belt, “I certainly don’t have to write another book if I don’t want to, but I find it’s a very important thing to me to be a novelist.

  • BEA 2016: Robyn Carr
: An Award Winning Carr

    With more than 40 novels under her belt, including several popular romance series, it’s no wonder that Robyn Carr is the 2016 Romance Writers of America Nora Roberts Lifetime Achievement Award winner.

  • BEA 2016: Jane Hamilton: Succession and Its Aftermath

    After a rough patch of anxiety over the state of publishing, the reading public, and her own writing, Jane Hamilton has come up with a novel about heartland America that is being praised by a range of writers, including Karen Joy Fowler, Ann Patchett, and Tom Perrotta.

  • BEA 2016: Mary Kubica: A BEA Trifecta

    When Mary Kubica came to her first BEA in 2014, it was as a debut novelist.

  • BEA 2016: Marcia Clark: Crime Fiction After O.J.

    Marcia Clark wanted to write crime fiction since childhood, but lacked the confidence to go for a career as a writer.

  • BEA 2016: Elizabeth Cobbs Talks About Hamilton’s Infidelities

    What began as a quirky little musical at New York’s Public Theater has now blossomed into the most hyped show on Broadway.

  • BEA 2016: Amor Towles: Under Hotel

    Picture a luxurious hotel in Moscow circa 1922 and a young aristocrat whose “dangerous” tendencies have caused a revolutionary tribunal to condemn him—not to death but to lifetime incarceration in that luxury hotel.

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