Jane Green (author)

Jane Green, born in 1968,[2] also known by her married name, Jane Green Warburg,[1] is an English-born American author whose works of fiction are American and international best-sellers.[2] As of 2014, Green's books had sold in excess of 10 million copies globally, with translations of them appearing in thirty-one languages,[2] making her a leading author, globally, of commercial women's fiction. With regard to genres, she has been described as "[o]ne of the first of the chick lit" authors,[2][3][4] and as a founding author of the form of fiction sometimes referred to as "mum lit."[3]

Jane Green
Born (1968-05-31) 31 May 1968[1]
London, England]]
Other namesJane Green Warburg
OccupationAuthor
Years active2000–present
Spouse(s)first, David Burke;
second, Ian Warburg
Children6, of whom 2
are stepchildren

Biography

Jane Green was born in London, England, on 31 May 1968.[1] She attended South Hampstead High School, and went on to study fine art at Aberystwyth University.[2][1]

Career

Green was employed by Granada TV as a publicist in her early 20s.[2] She continued working as a journalist throughout her twenties, writing women's features for publications including The Daily Express,[2][5] The Daily Mail, and Cosmopolitan magazine.

Green left The Daily Express in 1996, to begin work which in thpublication of her first book, Straight Talking seven months later,[2][5] for which there was a bidding war,[2] and which became a best-seller. The book launched her career as "the queen of chick lit". Her novels include Jemima J: A Novel About Ugly Ducklings and Swans (2000),[2] Life Swap (UK; Swapping Lives in the US, 2006),[2] Second Chance (2007),[2] The Beach House (2008),[2] and Saving Grace (2015),[2] five of seventeen novels through 2016 that became New York Times best-sellers. As of 2014, Green had over 10 million books in print,[2] and many global best-sellers. "Jane Green" is the name she continued to use in her writing career, including after she married Ian Warburg of the Warburg banking family, her second spouse,[2] and legally took his name.

Green has taught at writers' conferences,[2] and writes for various publications including Cosmopolitan magazine,[2] The Sunday Times, The Daily Telegraph, Parade magazine, and The Huffington Post.[2] A graduate of the French Culinary Institute, she is publishing a cookbook, Good Taste. As of this date, Green is also writing as a weekly column for The Lady magazine in the United Kingdom. Her contribution of an e-book on the marriages of English royals for ABC News, Green became an ABC News Radio correspondent, and covered the 2011 wedding of "Kate" Middleton to England's Prince William.[2]

Green contributed a story on the virtue of marital fidelity for The Moth Radio Hour, which was recorded in November 2015, and aired in September 2016.[6]

Personal life

As of 2014, Green lived in Westport, Connecticut,[2] with her second husband, investment adviser Ian Warburg (grandson of Mary and Edward Warburg), whom she married 6 March 2009. Green has four children from her first marriage[2] to American investment banker Davide Burke <ref name = Dodd> and two stepchildren.[2]

Books

  • Jemima J: A Novel About Ugly Ducklings and Swans (2000)
  • Mr. Maybe (2001)
  • Bookends (2002)
  • Babyville: A Novel (2003)
  • Straight Talking: A Novel
  • Spellbound [UK] / To Have and to Hold [US]
  • The Other Woman: A Novel (2005)
  • This Christmas (2005)
  • Life Swap [UK] / Swapping Lives [US] (2006)
  • Second Chance (2007)
  • The Beach House (2008)
  • Girl Friday [UK] / Dune Road [US] (2009)
  • The Love Verb [UK] / Promises to Keep [US] (2010)
  • The Patchwork Marriage [UK] / Another Piece of my Heart [US] (2012)
  • The Accidental Husband [UK] / Family Pictures [US] (2013)
  • Tempting Fate (2014)
  • Saving Grace (2015)
  • Cat and Jemima J (novella) (2015)
  • Summer Secrets (2015)
  • Falling: A Love Story (2016)
  • Good Taste [a food & entertaining/nonfiction book] (2016)
  • The Sunshine Sisters (2017)
  • The Friends We Keep (2019)

References

  1. Hill, Nanci Milone (7 March 2012). Reading Women: A Book Club Guide for Women's Fiction: A Book Club Guide for Women's Fiction. ABC-CLIO. pp. 61–. ISBN 978-1-59158-806-1.
  2. Graham, Natalie (17 October 2014). "Jane Green: Chick-Lit Author and Property Tycoon". Financial Times. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  3. Thomas, Scarlett (4 August 2002). "The great chick lit conspiracy". The Independent. Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  4. This is alongside Helen Fielding, who pioneered the genre with her "Bridget Jones's Diary" column in The Independent. See Thomas, The Independent. op. cit.
  5. "Meet the Writers: Jane Green". New York City: Barnes & Noble Booksellers. 16 December 2008. Archived from the original (interview and brief biography) on 16 December 2008. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  6. Green, Jane (13 September 2016) [9 November 2015]. The Moth Radio Hour: Greener Grass (streaming audio [duration, 14:04]). New York City: The Moth. Retrieved 22 September 2016.

Further reading

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