Beverly Jenkins Explained

Beverly Jenkins
Birth Place:Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Occupation:Novelist
Alma Mater:Michigan State University
Period:1994–present
Genre:Historical romance, Contemporary romance

Beverly Jenkins (born 1951, Detroit) is an American author of historical and contemporary romance novels with a particular focus on 19th-century African American life.[1] Jenkins was a 2013 NAACP Image Award nominee and, in 1999, was voted one of the Top 50 Favorite African American writers of the 20th century by the African American Literature Book Club.[2] Jenkins's historical romances are set during a period of African American history that she believes is often overlooked. This made it difficult to break into publishing because publishers weren't sure what to do with stories that involved African Americans but not slavery.[3]

Jenkins studied at Michigan State University as a Journalism and English Literature major. She lives in Southeastern Michigan.[4]

Early life

Jenkins was born in Detroit in 1951 to her parents, a high school teacher and an administrative aide.[5] Jenkins grew up surrounded by words. Her mother read to Jenkins while she was in the womb and bought her cloth books when she was a baby. Jenkins would chew on the cloth books while her mother encouraged her to "Eat those words, baby. Eat those words."[6] Jenkins read widely at her local library, everything from Alice in Wonderland to Dune to Zane Gray to early romance writers like Victoria Holt, Mary Stewart & Phyllis Whitney. Her early writing began when she became the editor of her elementary school newspaper. Jenkins attended Michigan State University in the spring of 1969.[7]

Career

Jenkins worked full-time in the Michigan State University library's circulation department. Each lunch hour, she would read articles from The Journal of Negro History (now called The Journal of African American History). Eventually, Jenkins and her husband moved to Ypsilanti, where she worked at the Parke Davis Pharmaceuticals' reference desk and began writing romance novels for fun. At the suggestion of a colleague, Jenkins looked for an agent and publisher. Avon published her first novel, Night Song, in 1994.

Though Jenkins has published books in many romance sub-genres, the majority of her books are historical romances. Jenkins calls herself a "kitchen table historian." She likens American history to a quilt with some pieces ripped out—the pieces belonging to minority history. Jenkins uses her books to weave the quilt back together by revealing patches of black history that are rarely taught in school. Slavery and the Civil Rights Movement are important pieces of African American history, but they aren't the only pieces. For example, her first three novels, Night Song, Vivid and Indigo, feature characters such as a schoolteacher, a cavalry officer, a female doctor and Underground Railroad heroes. They were all inspired by true history.

Jenkins found inspiration for Forbidden from two interesting bits of history. First, she read a news article about a high-end African American-run hotel that was uncovered during an archaeological dig in Virginia City. She also heard a story about a man seeing a black woman walking through the desert with a cook stove balanced on her head.[8] Jenkins includes bibliographies with her historical romances so readers can read further, if they choose.

Bibliography

TitleSeriesPublication YearISBN
Night Song1994
VividGrayson Family No. 11995
Indigo1996
Topaz1997
Through the StormLeVeq Family No. 11998
Taming of Jessi Rose, The1999
Always and Forever2000
Before the Dawn2001
Chance at Love, A2002
Belle and the Beau2002
"Homecoming"
short story in Gettin' Merry anthology
2002
The Edge of Midnight2004
Winds of the StormLeVeq Family No. 22004
The Edge of Dawn2004
Something like Love2005
Black Lace2005
Sexy/Dangerous2006
Prisoner of Love2007
Deadly Sexy2007
"Prisoner"
short story in Cuffed by Candlelight anthology
2007
Wild Sweet Love2007
JewelGrayson Family No. 22008
Josephine and the Soldier2009
Bring on the BlessingsBlessings No. 12009
CapturedLeVeq Family No. 32009
Second Helping, ABlessings No. 22009
"You Sang To Me"
short story in Rhythms of Love anthology
2010
"Holiday Heat"
short story in Once Upon a Holiday anthology
2010
Midnight2010
"I'll Be Home for Christmas"
short story in Baby, Let It Snow anthology
2011
Something Old, Something NewBlessings No. 32011
Night Hawk2011
"Hawaii Magic"
short story in Island for Two anthology
2012
"Overtime Love"
short story in Merry Sexy Christmas anthology
2012
Wish and a Prayer, ABlessings No. 42012
Destiny's EmbraceDestiny No. 12013
Destiny's SurrenderDestiny No. 22013
Heart of GoldBlessings No. 52014
Destiny's CaptiveDestiny No. 32014
For Your LoveBlessings No. 62015
ForbiddenOld West No. 12016
Stepping to a New DayBlessings No. 72016
BreathlessOld West No. 22017
Chasing Down a DreamBlessings No. 82017
TempestOld West No. 32018
Second Time SweeterBlessings No. 92018
RebelWomen Who Dare No. 12019
On the Corner of Hope and MainBlessings No. 102020
Wild RainWomen Who Dare No. 220219780062861719
To Catch a RavenWomen Who Dare No. 320229780062861740

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Author Beverly Jenkins' Romance With the Past. May 8, 2015. Huffington Post. August 5, 2015.
  2. Web site: Beverly Jenkins, Author. aalbc.com.
  3. Web site: Beverly Jenkins Wraps Bitter History in Sweet Romance. npr.org.
  4. Web site: Author Beverly Jenkins biography and book list. freshfiction.com.
  5. Contemporary Black Biography. 1058-1316. 14. Gale. 1997. Beverly Jenkins.
  6. Web site: Talking Black History and Love Stories with Romance Writing Pioneer Beverly Jenkins. January 26, 2016. Jezebel. July 3, 2017.
  7. Web site: Beverly Jenkins: A Romance With Writing. October 20, 2016. Lansing State Journal. July 3, 2017.
  8. Web site: An Interview with Beverly Jenkins. April 24, 2015. Smart Bitches, Trashy Books. July 3, 2017.
  9. http://www.rtbookreviews.com/author/beverly-jenkins RT Book Reviews
  10. Web site: NAACP Image Awards: Winners Announced. February 1, 2013. Hollywood Reporter. July 21, 2017.
  11. Web site: Romance Writers of America . 2017-06-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150627104824/https://www.rwa.org/p/cm/ld/fid=543 . 2015-06-27 . dead .