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About Gwynne Forster
Gwynne Forster was born in North Carolina, grew up in Washington, D. C.,
and has lived, studied and worked in New York City ever since she came of
voting age. She considers herself a humanitarian, a perspective that she
inherited from her mother, a high school principal, and which she also
attributes to her work and education in the social sciences, more
specifically, demography. Her fiction writing reflects her training in the
sociology of the family and her understanding of inter-personal relations.
It should not be surprising then, that quite a few of Gwynne’s novels and
novellas are set within the context of the family.
Gwynne relaxes best when she is near—but not in—the water. She loves boating
and would spend hours fishing daily if she could. Oddly, she never learned
to swim, and she always wears a lifejacket when boating or fishing. Her
bedroom faces a river, and if she didn’t work, she would spend a lot of time
sitting in the bedroom gazing at the water and the passing boats. Moving
water, she thinks, is soothing and relieves stress.
Gwynne Forster is national best-selling and award-winning author of six
novels of general fiction, thirty romance novels, and six novellas. All of
her mainstream novels and several of her romance novels have been featured
in Black Expressions Magazine. When Twilight
Comes, her first mainstream novel, was featured on the
magazine’s cover, and it also remained on the Essence Magazine list of best
sellers for several months. Her latest mainstream novel,
Getting Some Of Her Own, was
published in August 2007 to excellent reviews, and Romantic Times Magazine
has nominated the book for an award as best African American romance 2007.
e-Harlequin’s Weekly Newsletter listed Gwynne’s November 2007 Kimani
Romance, Forbidden Temptation, as
one of Harlequin’s ten best books of 2007. The highly acclaimed mainstream
novel, When You Dance With The Devil.,
published in August 2006, attracted media attention.
Among her many awards and forms of recognition, Gwynne is most proud of her
election in 2006 to the Affaire de Coeur Magazine writers Hall Of Fame, the
Lifetime Achievement Award given to her by Romantic Times Magazine in 2007,
and her selection by Harlequin to write a romance novel as a participant in
its Novels Of Hope project with the St. June Children’s Research Hospital.
Look for the book, What Matters Most,
in October 2008.
The following novels were nominated by Affaire de Coeur Magazine for “Best
romance novel of the year with African-American Hero and heroine:
Ecstasy, Obsession, Naked Soul, Against The
Wind, Fools Rush In, Swept Away, Secret Desire, Scarlet Woman.
Winners of the award were: Ecstasy, Naked Soul,
Fools Rush In, Swept Away, and
Against The Wind
Readers of Affaire de Coeur Magazine named Gwynne one of Top Ten Favorite
Authors for the years 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2006, and one of five outstanding
achievers (1998).
Rendezvous Magazine voted Secret Desire
“Rose Bud of the month for November 2003.”
The 2001 Gold Pin Award from Black Writers Reunion and Conference went to
Beyond Desire, one of Gwynne’s
most celebrated books. Double Day Book Club and Literary Guild selected
Beyond Desire and used the book
to start the Black Expressions Book Club.
Romance In Color internet site and reviews gave its 1999 Award of Excellence
to Against The Wind and voted
Gwynne Author of the Year. The site voted Flying
High runner-up to best romance of the year 2003 and gave it
Honorable mention.
Romance Slam Jam 2000 nominated Gwynne for the Vivian Stephens Lifetime
Achievement Award. Romance Slam Jam 2001 gave Gwynne an Emma Award for her
novella, “Learning to Love” in the anthology, Going To The Chapel. Romance
Slam Jam 2003 nominated Blues From Down Deep
for an Emma Award as best mainstream novel.
Fiction writing is Gwynne Forster’s second career. She holds bachelors and
masters degrees in sociology, a master’s degree in economics/demography and
has additional graduate credits in journalism. As a demographer, she is
widely published. She is formerly chief of (non-medical) research in
fertility and family planning in the Population Division of the United
Nations in New York and served for four years as chairperson of the
International Programme Committee of the International Planned Parenthood
Federation (London, England). These positions took her on official business
to sixty-three developed and developing countries. Gwynne sings on her
church choir, loves to entertain, and is a museum hopper, gourmet cook and
avid gardener. She enjoys classical music, opera, jazz and blues with her
husband with whom she lives in New York City.
She is represented by the Steele-Perkins Literary Agency, 26 Island Lane,
Canandaigua, NY 14424.
CONTACT GWYNNE

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