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The
Author

Meet Louisa Edwards
Photos
“My favorite thing about romance is that
it’s like real life — but the way you wish life could be.”
—Louisa Edwards
Louisa Edwards grew up in Virginia, surrounded by the beauty of
the Blue Ridge Mountains. By age 11, she was sneaking
Harlequins out of her visiting grandmother’s suitcase, making
her parents nervous about what, precisely, their little girl was
learning from those books. Naturally, they were relieved when
Louisa decided to attend Bryn Mawr College, hoping the Seven
Sisters vibe might instill the intellectual rigor she thus far
seemed to lack.
To their dismay, however, even the ivy-covered halls of Bryn
Mawr couldn’t distract Louisa from her addiction to romances.
Instead, she traded in her Harlequins for longer, juicier
single titles, reading everything from Laura Kinsale to Jennifer
Cruisie. She also managed to graduate cum laude with a degree in
Romance Languages (which is not as sexy as it sounds—mostly she
studied Spanish, French, and Italian literature, although some
of that French stuff did get fairly racy.)
After graduation, Louisa moved to Manhattan, landing a job as an
editorial assistant at Penguin Group (USA), where she worked
directly for the smart, savvy president of Mass Market
Paperbacks, Leslie Gelbman, who guided Louisa as she built her
own list.
Vindication! It was possible to make a living from reading
romance novels. Louisa’s parents were equal parts surprised and
thrilled. While at Berkley, Louisa was lucky enough to work
with some great authors, assistant editing Leslie’s heavy
hitters, Nora Roberts and Jayne Ann Krentz. Louisa’s own list
included, among others, Lucy Monroe, Jennifer St. Giles, and
Shelley Bradley. All of which led to Louisa being promoted to
assistant editor.
Then real life romance ensued: Louisa married a journalist and
was promptly exiled to Ohio so her husband could work for his
family’s newspaper. There Louisa started reviewing romances for
FreshFiction.com and took a part-time job at the Culinary
Vegetable Institute. Personal interaction with chefs, plus the
limited repertoire of local restaurants stoked Louisa’s interest
in food. She began critiquing restaurants for the local
newspaper, got sucked into Gordon Ramsay’s Hell’s Kitchen,
trailed a chef friend at his restaurant in Raleigh, North
Carolina, started cooking her way through Julia Child’s
Mastering the Art of French Cooking, and decided to bring it all
together by writing
CAN’T STAND THE HEAT.
Now she awaits the response of the masses to her foodie-inspired
romance. Meanwhile, Louisa will continue to eat in as many
wonderful restaurants as possible—purely for research, of
course.
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