Difference between revisions of "Judith Stanton"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
* ''[[A Stallion To Die For|Stallion To Die For, A]]'' - 2012 | * ''[[A Stallion To Die For|Stallion To Die For, A]]'' - 2012 | ||
* ''[[Wild Indigo]]'' - 1998 | * ''[[Wild Indigo]]'' - 1998 | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Recognitions== | ||
+ | *2000 [[Romance Writers of America (RWA) Awards|RITA Award]] Finalist - Long Historical Romance, ''[[His Stolen Bride]]'' |
Revision as of 23:40, 11 November 2024
Judith Stanton grew up on a farm in Piedmont North Carolina, riding horses, herding cows, working in tobacco, and listening to her father’s stories of mules and plows and teams that pulled the wagon to town. Secretly she read every novel and poem she could get her hands on and dreamed of writing her own.
That dream came true. Her contemporary equestrian suspense, A Stallion to Die For, has a five-star rating on Amazon.com.
Her scholarly edition of The Collected Letters of Charlotte Smith is published by Indiana University Press.
Her recent poetry collection, The Deer Diaries, records images and experiences of her life in rural Chatham County, North Carolina, and has received high critical praise.
On the Web
- Website [1]
Books
- His Stolen Bride - 2000
- Kissing Gate, The - 2014
- Mad Marquis, The - 2014
- Stallion To Die For, A - 2012
- Wild Indigo - 1998
==Recognitions==
- 2000 RITA Award Finalist - Long Historical Romance, His Stolen Bride