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Sandra BrownIn 1979, Sandra Brown lost her job at a television program and
decided to give writing a try. She bought an armful of romance novels
and writing books, set up a typewriter on a card table and wrote her
first novel. Harlequin passed but Dell bit, and Brown was off and
writing, publishing her works under an assortment of pseudonyms. From
such modest beginnings, Brown has evolved into multimillion publishing
empire of one, the CEO of her own literary brand; she towers over the
landscape of romantic fiction. Brown has used her growing clout to
insist her publishers drop the bosom-and-biceps covers and has added
more intricate subplots, suspense, and even unhappy endings to her
work. The result: A near-constant presence on The New York Times
bestsellers list. In 1992, she had three on the list at the same time,
joining that exclusive club of Stephen King, Tom Clancy, J. K. Rowling,
and Danielle Steel. "Brown is
perhaps best known now for her longer novels of romantic suspense. The
basic outline for these stories has passionate love, lust, and violence
playing out against a background of unraveling secrets and skeletons
jumping out of family closets," wrote Barbara E. Kemp in the book Twentieth-Century Romance & Historical Writers
. Kemp also praises Brown's sharp dialogue and richly detailed
characters. "However, her greatest key to success is probably that she
invites her readers into a fantasy world of passion, intrigue, and
danger," she wrote. "They too can face the moral and emotional dilemmas
of the heroine, safe in the knowledge that justice and love will
prevail." A 1992 New York Times review placed Brown among a group of a writers "who have mastered the art of the slow tease."
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