Rita Clay Estrada

Rita Clay Estrada
Born Rita Clay
July 31, 1941 (1941-07-31) (age 70)
Michigan, U.S.A.
Pen name Rita Clay,
Tira Lacy,
Rita Clay Estrada
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Period 1982 - 2001
Genres Romance
Children 4
Relative(s) Rita Gallagher (mother)

Rita Clay Estrada (b. July 31, 1941 in Michigan, U.S.A.) is an U.S. writer of romance novels as Rita Clay, Tira Lacy and Rita Clay Estrada, she also wrote non-fiction books about writing romance novels. She was the first president of the Romance Writers of America, and founding member with her mother Rita Gallagher.

Contents

Biography

Born Rita Clay on July 31, 1941 in Michigan, U.S.A.. Her mother, Rita Gallagher, was a former Miss Michigan, a romance novelist and a noted writing instructor, while her father was a pilot with the U.S. Air Force. She spent much of her early years living in Europe. She married her high school sweetheart when she was very young and stayed at home to raise their four children. In 1977, when she had been married about 20 years, her husband brought her a typewriter and said, "'You said you always wanted to write. Now write.'"[1]

Her first attempt was a long historical romance which was promptly rejected. Her next manuscript, a contemporary romance, was likewise rejected. Her third manuscript, Wanderer's Dream, sold to Silhouette Books. She used her maiden name, Rita Clay for that and an additional seven titles for Silhouette. In 1982, she moved to Dell to write for their Candlelight Ecstasy line. Harlequin owned her pen name, so she wrote as Tira Lacy, an anagram of Rita Clay. In 1985 she resigned with Harlequin and asked to use her full name, Rita Clay Estrada, on all future books.[1]

She generally takes 4.5 months to write a novel. Except for punctuation and fact-checking, she does very little rewriting, as "that's why there are editors."[1] Generally, she writes five pages each night and more on the weekends. Her novels have been translated in 23 languages.[1]

Estrada was a founding member and the first president of the Romance Writers of America (RWA). Their signature award, the RITA, which is the highest award of excellence given in the genre of romantic fiction, is named for her.[2] The RWA also awarded Estrada their Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000.[3]

She and her husband are divorced.[1]

Works

Novels

As Rita Clay

Single novels
Wise Folly Series
  1. Wise Folly (1982)
  2. Recapture the Love (1984)
Omnibus in collaboration

As Tira Lacy

Single novels

As Rita Clay Estrada

Will and the Way Series
  1. Will and the Way (1985)
  2. A Woman's Choice (1985)
  3. Something to Treasure (1986)
Western Lovers: Ranchin' Dads Series Multi-Author
15. The Best Things in Life (1986)
Montclair Emeralds Multi-Author
3. Trust (1988)
Bartholomew Family Saga
  1. Second to None (1989)
  2. The Lady Says No (1991)
Lost Loves Series Multi-Author
3. Forms of Love (1994)
The Wrong Bed Series Multi-Author
4. Love Me, Love My Bed (1996)
Rebels & Rogues Multi-Author
Gallagher Sisters Saga
  1. Wishes (1997)
  2. Dreams (1998)
  3. Everything About Him (1998)
Bachelor Auction Series Multi-Author
Single novels
Omnibus in collaboration
Non fiction

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Racine, Marty (August 26, 1995). "Romancing the word". Houston Chronicle. http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl?id=1995_1293554. Retrieved 2007-08-16 
  2. ^ "RITA Awards". Romance Writers of America. https://www.rwanational.org/eweb/DynamicPage.aspx?Site=RWA&WebKey=626513aa-6aaa-4e14-9873-6a3c1efbaa87. Retrieved 2007-07-04. 
  3. ^ Ward, Jean Marie. "RWA National 2000: Contrasting Passions". Crescent Blues. http://www.crescentblues.com/3_4issue/rwa.shtml. Retrieved 2007-07-04.