Tasha Alexander


Tasha Alexander is an American author who writes New York Times bestselling historical mystery fiction.

Biography

Alexander was born and raised in South Bend, Indiana to Anastasia and Gary Gutting, University of Notre Dame philosophy professors.
In 2002, while living in New Haven, Connecticut, she started work on her first novel, after being inspired by a passage in Dorothy L. Sayers's Gaudy Night. Carolyn Marino at William Morrow acquired the book, And Only to Deceive, which was published in 2005 as the first installment of the Lady Emily series. Following a move to Franklin, Tennessee, where Alexander wrote her second novel in a local Starbucks, she eventually relocated to Chicago, where she married British novelist Andrew Grant in 2010.
In 2007, according to Library Journal, Minotaur Books "lured her away" from William Morrow. She is now edited by Charles Spicer and is the imprint's top writer of historical mysteries. Alexander's work has been translated into more than a dozen languages and has been nominated for the Bruce Alexander Award and the RT Reviewers Choice Award. She has a reputation for being extremely careful about accuracy in her novels and is meticulous about research.

The ''Lady Emily'' series

The Lady Emily series, set in a time between the 1890s and 1900s and spanning across cities throughout Europe, follow the adventures of Lady Emily and her husband Colin Hargreaves.
;Novels and short stories

Non-''Lady Emily'' short story works

based on motion picture screenplay written by William Nicholson and Michael Hirst;
published to coincide with release of 2007 film , starring Cate Blanchett and Clive Owen.