Susan Higginbotham is an American historical fiction author and attorney. She has written on the Middle Ages and the Wars of the Roses.
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Susan Higginbotham | |
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Occupation | Author |
Language | English |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Virginia Commonwealth University |
Genre | Historical fiction |
Notable awards | Silver Award for historical fiction 2005 Independent Publisher Book Awards' Gold Medal for Historical/Military Fiction 2008 |
Website | |
www |
Susan Higginbotham earned her undergraduate degree from Virginia Commonwealth University, and her master's degree in English literature from Hunter College in New York City.[1][2] She received her Juris Doctor degree from Campbell University law school, and began working for a legal publisher, a position she still holds today.[1][3]
Higginbotham is married, with two children. They live in Brunswick, Maryland.[1][2]
Higginbotham began working on her first novel, The Traitor's Wife in 2003, and after reading some articles on self-publishing, she self-published in 2005.[4] It won ForeWord magazine's 2005 Silver Award for historical fiction and the 2008 Independent Publisher Book Awards' Gold Medal for Historical/Military Fiction.[1] According to WorldCat, the book is held in 252 libraries.[5] It is a fictional account of the life of Eleanor de Clare, wife of Hugh le Despenser the Younger.[6] Sourcebooks contacted her in 2008, and offered to republish it,[4] resulting in it reaching number 8 in The Boston Globe's list of fiction best sellers.[7] Her next novel was Hugh and Bess (2007), a sequel to her first novel, depicting the life of Eleanor and Hugh's eldest son, Hugh. It was reissued in August 2009.[2] Her next book, The Stolen Crown, was published in 2010 and is a fictional depiction of Catherine Woodville, Duchess of Buckingham. Her 2011 novel, The Queen of Last Hopes, features Margaret of Anjou.[8] Higginbotham's most recent works, Hanging Mary, The First Lady and the Rebel, and John Brown's Women, are set in 19th-century America.