

Interviewer Jessica Hatch has a passion for writing laugh-out-loud fiction with a strong-beating heart. It's lush with period detail but feels immediate." - Elin Hilderbrand "I think Williams is writing the best historical fiction out there. "Williams’ particular gift as a writer is peeling back the pages of history to breathe life into the interior lives of women - how they lived, loved, and lost within the expectations and limitations of their time." - Entertainment Weekly Beatriz’s books have won numerous awards, have been translated into more than a dozen languages, and appear regularly in bestseller lists around the world.īorn in Seattle, Washington, Beatriz now lives near the Connecticut shore with her husband and four children, where she divides her time between writing and laundry. # Register now!īeatriz Williams is the New York Times, USA Today, and internationally bestselling author of Our Woman in Moscow, The Summer Wives, Her Last Flight, The Golden Hour, The Secret Life of Violet Grant, A Hundred Summers, and several other works of historical fiction, including four novels in collaboration with fellow bestselling authors Karen White and Lauren Willig. A graduate of Stanford University with an MBA in Finance from Columbia University, Beatriz worked as a communications and corporate strategy consultant in New York and London before her first novel was published in 2012. Books will be available to purchase on-site from The Bookmark or you can bring a copy purchased from your favorite bookseller. live at the Regency Square Branch Library and live online via Zoom. Lit Chat Interview with Beatriz Williams, on Monday, July 10 at 6:30 p.m. Intrigued? This is your chance to meet the author in person, ask questions about your favorite character, learn more about her writing process and find out what she's working on next! #Join the Live Interview Red Comet: The Short Life And Blazing Art Of Sylvia Plath by Heather ClarkĪs it’s common with the New York Times 10 Best Books Of The Year lists, the first five books are labelled under the genre literary fiction, and the other five are works of non-fiction, although Labatut is said to stand on the edge of both.Are you a fan of historical fiction? Then you don't want to miss for our next Lit Chat Interview! We are excited to announce that Beatriz Williams has made Jacksonville Public Library an official stop on her latest book tour! She's got a brand new, ravishing summer read that transports readers back to a midcentury New England in the years following the Second World War. Rich with secrets and Cold War intrigue, The Beach at Summerly "weaves two standbys of summer fiction into one escapist story" ( New York Times book review).Invisible Child: Poverty, Survival and Hope In An American City by Andrea Elliott.How The Word Is Passed: A Reckoning With The History Of Slavery Across America by Clint Smith.The Copenhagen Trilogy by Tove Ditlevsen, translated by Tiina Nunnally and Michael Favala Goldman.When We Cease To Understand The World by Benjamín Labatut, translated by Adrian Nathan West.

#Nytimes book review mods
Moved to Belgium in 2011, and to Rotterdam, The Netherlands, in 2019.Īvid reader, changing interests as the mods strikes. Carina Pereira, born in ‘87, in Portugal.
