Nancy Taylor Rosenberg
Nancy Camille Taylor-Rosenberg is an American writer. She attended school at Gulf Parnd resides in Dallas, Texas.
Her first novel, Mitigating Circumstances, was published in 1993, and the film rights were obtained by Academy Award winning director, Jonathan Demme. Rosenberg novels have been translated into many languages. The majority of her novels have been New York Times bestsellers.[1]
Rosenberg is also known for her philanthropic efforts. She received national acclaim for her writing program for inner city youth called "Voice of Tomorrow". The Board of Supervisors of Orange County voted her "A Woman of Excellence, Learning for Life" in 1994. She was featured on Prime Time Live and in People magazine for her adoption of a child with a rare, terminal illness called MMA. A physician in France who saw the Prime Time Live episode claimed he was curing MMA patients with liver transplants. At the time, the child Rosenberg adopted, Janelle Garcia, was the oldest living survivor with MMA. No one had previously lived past the age of eighteen. Janelle received both a kidney and liver transplant and is now in her early thirties, giving hope to future generations of children suffering from MMA.
Bibliography
Probation Officer Carolyn Sullivan
- Sullivan's Law (Kensington Books 5/2004, ISBN 978-0-7582-0618-3)
- Sullivan's Justice (Kensington Books 5/2005, ISBN 978-0-7582-0619-0)
- Sullivan's Evidence (Kensington Books 5/2006, ISBN 978-0-7582-1302-0
- Revenge of Innocents (Kensington Books 5/2007)
Lily Forrester (ADA, later Judge)
- Mitigating Circumstances (Dutton Books 1/1993, ISBN 978-0-525-93587-2)
- Buried Evidence (Hyperion Books 9/2000, ISBN 978-0-7868-6619-9)
- The Cheater (Forge Books 6/2009, ISBN 978-0-7653-1902-9
- My Lost Daughter (Forge Books 9/2010, ISBN 978-0-7653-1903-6
Standalones
- Interest of Justice (1993)
- First Offense (1994)
- Trial by Fire (1995)
- California Angel (1995)
- Abuse of Power (1997)
- Conflict of Interest (2002)