Kate Johnson (writer)

Kate Johnson, also known as Cat Marsters, is a British author who writes in the Paranormal and Speculative Romantic Novel genres. She is the author of the award-winning novel Max Seventeen.[1][2][3]

Kate Johnson
Bornc. 1980
United Kingdom
Pen nameCat Marsters
Kate Johnson
OccupationWriter
NationalityBritish
Genreromance, fantasy, paranormal romance
Website
etaknosnhoj.blogspot.com

Biography

Johnson is a British-born writer of paranormal novels, novellas and short stories especially in the romance area. She is the author of the Romantic Novel of the Year award-winning novel Max Seventeen.[1] Her award-winning novel is self-published which made it the first time an indie publication won an award from the Romantic Novelists' Association. Her novel was also notable for having a bisexual main character. Johnson has also won the Wisconsin Romance Writers's Silver Quill and Passionate Ink's Passionate Plume award. Her debut novel was shortlisted for the Contemporary Romantic Novel Category Award in 2012. She is also published by Choc Lit. She lives in Essex.[2][1][4][5][6][7]

Awards

  • 2018 – Shortlisted Paranormal or Speculative Romantic Novel of the Year Award
  • 2017 – Winner Paranormal or Speculative Romantic Novel of the Year Award
  • 2012 – Shortlisted Contemporary Romantic Novel of the Year Award
  • 2011 – Epic Award (as Cat Marsters)

Bibliography

  • Not Your Knight in Shining Armour: a Royal Wedding Romance
  • Not Your Royal Christmas, a royal romance novella
  • Not Your Prince Charming: a Royal Wedding Romance
  • Not Your Cinderella: a Royal Wedding Romance
  • I, Spy? (Sophie Green Mystery, #1)
  • "A" is for Apple (Sophie Green Mystery, #3)
  • Ugley Business (Sophie Green Mystery, #2)
  • Still Waters (Sophie Green Mystery, #4)
  • Run Rabbit Run (Sophie Green Mystery, #5)
  • The Twelve Lies of Christmas (Sophie Green Mystery, #0.5)
  • The UnTied Kingdom
  • Impossible Things
  • Max Seventeen
  • Max Seventeen: Firebrand
  • Little Haunting by the Sea
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gollark: Blacknet would actually work (very slowly and insecurely) on potatOS I think.
gollark: I've just realized that potatOS superglobals likely suffer *horrible* race conditions.
gollark: How'd Blacknet work? String metatable bug?
gollark: SPUDNET communications are best.

References

Further reading

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