Shannon Waverly

Shannon Waverly is an American author of contemporary romance novels.

Shannon Waverly
BornFall River, Massachusetts United States
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
Period1990-2000
Genreromance

Biography

Waverly was born in Fall River, Massachusetts. Even as a child she enjoyed writing, and attempted to write her first novel when she was only 12. Unable to finish her novel, Waverly turned to short stories, submitting several to Seventeen, all of which were quickly rejected.[1]

She earned a B.A. in English from Stonehill College, where she served as the editor of the school's literary magazine during her senior year. Shortly after her graduation she married her college sweetheart, and then embarked on a brief career as a school teacher. Waverly was a stay-at-home-mother while her son and daughter were young. When her children were teenagers she worked as a temporary secretary, giving her the opportunity to research different fields and careers.[1]

After plotting four romance novels, Waverly finally sold her fifth manuscript to Harlequin books. The novel was published in 1990 as part of the Harlequin Romance category line.[1] Some of her subsequent novels have been published within the Harlequin Superromance line instead. Romantic Times has praised her for "wonderfully real characters."[2]

Novels

  • A Summer Kind of Love (1990)
  • No Trespassing (1991)
  • New Lease on Love (1992)
  • Temporary Arrangement (1993)
  • Christmas Angel (1993)
  • Expectations (1994)
  • The Baby Battle (1994)
  • Three for the Road (1995)
  • The Best Man (1995)
  • Under One Roof (1996)
  • Found, One Father (1997)
  • Julia (1998)
  • Vacancy, Wife (1999)
  • Lauren (1999)
  • Cathryn (2000)

Omnibus

gollark: It's very unlikely that after just 8ish years of deep learning people hit upon the optimal way to do anything ever.
gollark: Since lack of memory is most noticeable when it doesn't have fairly fixed information to work off.
gollark: You can also probably simplify the issue by just biasing it against saying "I" and "me" and such.
gollark: And most readers probably aren't checking because it's slow and annoying.
gollark: They probably need to be consistent with the last page at most.

References

  1. "Shannon Waverly". eHarlequin.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-01. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
  2. Richardson, Debbie (1995). "Book Review:Three For the Road". Romantic Times. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
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