Nancy Warren | |
---|---|
Born | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Occupation | novelist |
Nationality | Canadian |
Genres | romance novels |
www.nancywarren.net |
Nancy Warren is a Pacific Northwest author of contemporary romance novels. She received her first publication contract after winning Harlequin's 2000 Summer Blaze contest. Since then, she has released 30 novels and novellas, been twice nominated for the Romance Writers of America's RITA Award, and won a Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award.
Contents |
Nancy Warren was born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia.[1] After graduating with an honours degree in English literature from the University of British Columbia,[2] she began work as a journalist. For five years, she worked her way up the journalistic ladder, from answering phones to writing to editing.[1][2] The work taught her the need for brevity and clarity in writing, as well as the fact that an article must grab the reader's attention immediately.[2]
Ready for a change, Warren moved into corporate communications and public relations. She worked for both government and businesses and ran her own company for a time.[1] She quit her job when her husband was transferred to Vancouver, and spent the next four years learning how to write a novel. In 1999, she won the Molly Contest in the Short Contemporary Category.[1] The following year, she entered Harlequin Books's 2000 Summer Blaze Contest. The contest, designed to highlight the new Harlequin Blaze line of category romances, required her to submit a 10-page love scene and a synopsis for a complete book. Warren won the contest, giving her a contract to write her Blaze novel.[3] Two weeks later, Harlequin bought two manuscripts which she had previously submitted. One of these, Flashback, became her first published novel, a July 2001 Harlequin Temptation. The other, Shotgun Nanny, became a Harlequin Duet.[1] Her submission for the Blaze contest became her second publication, Live a Little.[3]
Warren has continued to write for both the Harlequin Temptation and Harlequin Blaze lines. She says these are her favorite lines because of "the contemporary tone, the sexy feel", and that many of them contain humour.[3] The two lines are similar, except that Blaze allows for a longer book (by about 15,000 words) and has steamier love scenes. In 2004, Warren branched into single-title novels with the release of Drive Me Crazy.[3] In 2007, she became the launch author for a new Harlequin series celebrating NASCAR. She wrote the first and last book in the sixteen-book series. Both of her novels featured cameo appearances by real-life NASCAR driver Carl Edwards, who worked closely with Warren to create a "suitable fictional representation of himself."[4] Her work with the NASCAR series was featured on the front page of the New York Times.[4]
Each of her category romance novels takes Warren approximately three months to write, and she often spends six months or more writing her single-title novels.[3] Her goal is to finish at least ten rough draft pages per day.[2] Warren claims to always be planning her next book while writing. Although she lives in Canada, the majority of her novels have been set in the United States, usually in places that she has visited.[3]
Warren has written more than 30 novels and novellas, some of which have appeared on the USAToday Bestseller List.[5] She has won the Lauren Wreath Award, the Colorado Romance Writers Award, and a Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award for Best Blaze. She has further been nominated for a Romantic Times Career Achievement Award in series romance, and has twice been nominated for the Romance Writers of America RITA Award, the romance author's equivalent of an Academy Award.[2]