Susan Storer Clark

Susan Storer Clark has written for the Washington Independent Review of Books since its inception. Her historical novel, The Monk Woman’s Daughter, was a finalist in the Nancy Pearl contest for literary fiction, and was named a favorite in historical fiction in the New York City Big Book award competition. She is currently at work on a second novel. Susan is a former broadcast journalist who wrote and reported for the Voice of America and for WRC-TV. She holds degrees in history from Rhodes College and King’s College London. She blogs about history, historical fiction, and writing at www.historymuse.us. Susan and her husband, Rich, live in the Seattle area, where they have renovated an old farmhouse, and where she plays bass guitar with the band Learning to Fly.
44 entries by Susan Storer Clark
A Place Called Home: A Memoir
By David Ambroz
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A poignant testament to the need for better foster care.
Greek to Me
By Mary Norris

An intrepid copyeditor offers up a Valentine to the birthplace of democracy.
Alone Time
By Stephanie Rosenbloom

A veteran travel writer celebrates the joy of going solo.
Greek to Me: Adventures of the Comma Queen
By Mary Norris

An intrepid copyeditor offers up a Valentine to the birthplace of democracy.
Alone Time: Four Seasons, Four Cities, and the Pleasures of Solitude
By Stephanie Rosenbloom

A veteran travel writer celebrates the joy of going solo.
Where We Lived: Essays on Places
By Henry Allen

The Pulitzer-winning critic offers gently meditative, sometimes humorous recollections of the locales he’s called home.

The bestselling memoir of poor, working-class whites is an entertaining and insightful read
Don’t Forget Me, Bro: A Novel
By John Michael Cummings
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This gritty, graceful tale explores the eternal question of whether we can — or should — go home again.
Friendswood: A Novel
By René Steinke

Welcome to a pleasant Texas town with some dirty secrets.
Poisoned Ground
Sandra Parshall
Big money and murder come to rural Virginia in Sandra Parshall’s latest mystery.
After I’m Gone
Laura Lippman
More than a murder mystery, this complex tale shows the impact of a Baltimore bookmaker’s disappearance on the lives of his wife, daughters, and mistress.
The Legend of Broken
Caleb Carr
A novel that combines elements of speculative history and fantasy to tell an epic tale centered on the fictional kingdom of Broken.