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Six months ago, I was obviously in a state of bliss at the launch of MRS. POE….

Six months ago, I was obviously in a state of bliss at the launch of MRS. POE. (The more level-headed one in the picture is my editor.) Now, in a week, MRS. POE comes out in paperback. Thanks to your support, my friends, this has been a life-changing adventure. Thanks to you, I will actually …

Six months ago, I was obviously in a state of bliss at the launch of MRS. POE…. Read More »

Congratulations to Anne Barnhill on the release of “Queen Elizabeth’s Daughter.”…

Congratulations to Anne Barnhill on the release of "Queen Elizabeth's Daughter." Tudor fans will eat this up: From the author of "At the Mercy of the Queen," comes the gripping tale of Mary Shelton, Elizabeth I’s young cousin and ward, set against the glittering backdrop of the Elizabethan court. http://ift.tt/1nEW3iv from Lynn Cullen’s Facebook Wall …

Congratulations to Anne Barnhill on the release of “Queen Elizabeth’s Daughter.”… Read More »

Sound the trumpets! The highly-acclaimed THE CHALICE, a fantastic book by my fr…

Sound the trumpets! The highly-acclaimed THE CHALICE, a fantastic book by my friend Nancy Bilyeau, is out in paperback today. You won't want to miss this one! The Chalice: A Novelhttp://ift.tt/vggwU1Available in: NOOK Book (eBook), Paperback, Hardcover, Audiobook. In the midst of England’s Reformation, a young novice will risk everything to defy the most powerful …

Sound the trumpets! The highly-acclaimed THE CHALICE, a fantastic book by my fr… Read More »

Anne Charlotte Lynch–an early advocate of the book club. I offer her image her…

Anne Charlotte Lynch–an early advocate of the book club. I offer her image here since I forgot, as usual, to take a picture of the fantastic group of women at the book club that I visited last night. It's hard to remember to get out the camera when I'm having such a great time. But …

Anne Charlotte Lynch–an early advocate of the book club. I offer her image her… Read More »

The New York Times

Is it true that Edgar Allan Poe cheated on his tubercular, insipid young wife with a lady poet he’d met at a literary salon? Cullen makes you hope so. The man who wrote of “the bells, bells, bells” deserved a little euphony. This tale is told from the point of view of his likely lover, …

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Oprah.com

…escorts you into the glittering world of New York City in the 1840s, when poets were celebrities and the admission of emotions–like silk gowns and glossy beaver hats–were a luxury…A bewitching, vivid trip into the heyday of American literary society.