Sandra Brown
The FACTS provided do not include a single named work, title, or most-cited publication, which the structural recipe requires as an opening anchor. Without a work title in the FACTS, any mention of a specific book would violate the Evidence Lock. The biography below is therefore shortened accordingly, covering only what the FACTS support.
Sandra Brown is a novelist and writer born on March 12, 1948, in Waco, Texas. She writes in English and works primarily in the romance genre.
Brown was educated at Texas Christian University before going on to establish herself as a fiction writer. A citizen of the United States, she has built her career within the American literary landscape, producing work in the romance genre across several decades.
The authorized bibliographic label assigned to her, "Brown, Sandra, 1948-," reflects the ongoing nature of her career as a novelist working in English.
Quotes by Sandra Brown
Sandra Brown's insights on:

In my opinion, Armani, better than any other designer, does great things for the female form. And a pair of Levis does great things for the male physique. Not that I look.

Once I started to write, it was like all the lights came on. I was always making up stories in my head. I was a daydreamer. I didn't start as a child, but once I started, I couldn't stop. It was compulsive.

Writing 'Rainwater' was a refreshing change of pace... a change of everything, in fact.

I grew up loving books and stories. Reading became my favourite pastime, and you have to be a reader before you can be a writer.

When I set out to write, I see it very visually. I almost feel like a reporter. I'm relating what I'm seeing and hearing, so it's kind of watching a play for me.

My first computer was an IBM Display Writer. With all its components, it was roughly the size of a bass fishing boat.

Life throws surprises, sorrows, sadness, and hardship, and I think that writing has actually grounded me. It kept me grounded when everything else was falling apart.

Yes, I love my homes, I love to travel, I love my family, and I love doting on my new grandchildren. But you can only do so much of that. I don't go to lunch with friends. I don't join clubs. I don't have any big hobbies. I work. I come up with stories. I can't even imagine a life where I'm not sitting around, worried about my next book.

I love writing villains because I was the big sister of five girls, so I had heavy responsibility growing up. I had to be 'the good girl.'
