Sabrina Jeffries

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Deborah Gonzales

Sabrina Jeffries
Pen name Sabrina Jeffries, Deborah Martin, Deborah Nicholas
Occupation novelist
Nationality United States
Writing period 1992-present
Genres romance

Deborah Gonzales (born 1958) is a best-selling American author of romance novels, primarily under the pen name Sabrina Jeffries. She also writes under the pen names Deborah Martin and Deborah Nicholas.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Jeffries lived a normal childhood until she was seven, when her parents decided to become missionaries and moved the family to Thailand. Over the next eleven years, Jeffries saw many adventures, including being chased by a baby elephant, playing in a rain forest, and having to experience the entire series of rabies shots. Because she only had her siblings to play with, Jeffries escaped into the world of books, reading everything from comic books to classics, with romance novels being her favorites.[1] She began making up her own stories when she was twelve, only to discover that every one of them was a romance of some sort. [2]

Jeffries earned a Ph.D. in English, writing her dissertation on James Joyce.[3] While serving as a visiting assistant professor of English at Tulane University[4], Jeffries attempted to develop an academic work on her dissertation.[2] She found herself bored with this attempt, and began writing a romance novel instead. After realizing that she enjoyed writing much more than teaching, Jeffries left the academic world to work as a technical writer, while writing novels at night.[2] Although her first attempt did not sell, after ten rejections Jeffries's second book was finally picked up by Leisure.[5] At this point, Jeffries quit her job to become a full-time writer.[2] She has since sold twenty-five novels.[3] She has published historical romances as both Sabrina Jeffries and Deborah Martin, and contemporary paranormal romantic suspense as Deborah Nicholas.[6] Jeffries has won the Holt Medallion Award, the Maggie, and the Booksellers' Best Award and has placed on the USAToday Bestseller's list.[4] Her novel Beware a Scot's Revenge became a New York Times Bestseller.[3]

Jeffries prefers to do her writing at a coffeehouse. When she is stuck on a plot problem she thinks through her ideas while on the treadmill. [7] Because her family's schedules fluctuate, however, she sometimes does not sit down to write until the middle of the night. In her limited spare time, Jeffries spends time making jewelry, putting together jigsaw puzzles, and reading.[8]

Jeffries lives in Cary, North Carolina[3] with her husband and son, Nick, who is autistic.[1]

[edit] Bibliography

[9]

[edit] As Sabrina Jeffries

[edit] Novels

[edit] School for Heiresses
  • Never Seduce a Scoundrel (2006)
  • Only a Duke Will Do (2006)
  • The School for Heiresses (Anthology) (2007)
  • Beware a Scot's Revenge (2007)
  • Let Sleeping Rogues Lie (2008)

[edit] The Royal Brotherhood Series
  • In the Prince's Bed (2004)
  • To Pleasure a Prince (2005)
  • One Night With a Prince (2005)

[edit] Swanlea Spinster Series
  • A Dangerous Love (2000)
  • A Notorious Love (2001)
  • After the Abduction (2002)
  • Dance of Seduction (2003)
  • Married to the Viscount (2004)

[edit] Lord Trilogy
  • The Pirate Lord (1998)
  • The Forbidden Lord (1999)
  • The Dangerous Lord (2000)

[edit] Novellas

  • Fantasy (2002)
  • A Day in Mossy Creek (2006)

[edit] As Deborah Martin

[edit] Novels

  • Moonlight Enchantment (1992)
  • Creole Nights (1992)
  • By Love Unveiled (1993)
  • Silver Deceptions (1994)
  • Dangerous Angel (1994)
  • Stormswept (1995)
  • Windswept (1996)
  • Creole Bride (1997)

[edit] Novellas

  • "Too Wicked for Heaven" in One Night With a Rogue (1995)
  • "Out of the Night" in Dance With the Devil (1997)

[edit] As Deborah Nicholas

  • Night Vision (1993)
  • Silent Sonata (1994)
  • Shattered Reflections (1996)

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ a b About Sabrina. Sabrina Jeffries Official Website. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  2. ^ a b c d RBL Presents Sabrina Jeffries. RBL Romantica. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  3. ^ a b c d Matchar, Emily (July 10, 2007), “A refuge in romance”, The Cary News, <http://www.carynews.com/arts_more/story/6676.html>. Retrieved on 11 July 2007 
  4. ^ a b Sarbina Jeffries. Berkley Jove Authors (2002). Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  5. ^ Burns, Monica (2004). Come Meet the Always Witty Sabrina Jeffries. MonicaBurns.Com. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  6. ^ Sabrina Jeffries FAQ. Sabrina Jeffries Official Website (2001). Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  7. ^ Interview with Sabrina Jeffries. The Mystic Castle (March 2005). Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  8. ^ ARR Interview with Sabrina Jeffries. A Romance Review. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  9. ^ Printable Booklist. Sabrina Jeffries Official Website (2006). Retrieved on 2007-02-05.

[edit] External links