

She also wrote the first book in her Great Chefs series that year. In 1985, Roberts also started her MacGregors series, which encompasses nine books, four of which were published in 1985.

There were ten books published for Silhouette in 1984, and ten more in 1985. In 1983, Roberts ramped her output up further, with the publication of of eight novels, including the two books in the Davidov series, for Silhouette and its subsidiaries. The following year, Roberts had five books published for Silhouette, as well as a shorter piece called Melodies of Love for a periodical. So, in 1981, Irish Thoroughbred, her first work of fiction, was published. Silhouette were looking to build a pool of authors that had been snubbed by Harlequin, of which Roberts was won. Shortly after starting her writing adventure, Roberts found success when the publisher Silhouette was formed.

Instead, her initial manuscripts were rejected. However, there would be no miracle story with the first-time author getting her manuscripts accepted by a big publishing house. With nothing else to do, Roberts sat down, put her ideas onto paper and eventually produced six manuscripts in her romantic fiction style, which she then sent through to the publisher harlequin. When the weather took a turn for the worse in February of that year, in the form of a blizzard, it left Roberts and her sons housebound, stuck behind three feet of snow.

While writing might not have been in Nora Roberts’ blood as a child, she made up for it in 1979, when she first sat down to write. with her husband, Roberts had two sons, Dan and Jason, whose names would later inspire her JD Robb pen name. She did, though, meet her future husband at high school, whom she married immediately after graduation in 1968. Roberts’ school years were unspectacular, and, unlike some authors, the seed for writing was not planted at this time. However, although she greatly enjoyed reading, Roberts was not a keen writer as a child, which, given her output now, is somewhat surprising. Roberts grew up in a family which valued literature, and so she grew up immersed in books. Roberts has Irish ancestry, which is reflected through some of her work, especially her Irish Hearts series of books. The author Nora Roberts was born Eleanor Marie Robertson in 1950, in the community of Silver Springs, Maryland.
