Hellmann, Libby Fischer
Anthony-nominated author Libby Fischer Hellmann writes "Compulsively Readable Thrillers." With ten crime fiction thrillers and twenty short stories published, she has also written suspense novels, historical mysteries, PI novels, amateur sleuth mysteries, police procedurals, and even a cozy mystery. At the core of all her stories, however, is always a crime or the possibility of one. And all of them feature strong female characters.
A recovering news junkie, Libby is a transplant from Washington, D.C., where, she says, "When you're sitting around the dinner table gossiping about the neighbors, you're talking politics." That never stopped. Armed with a Masters Degree in Film Production from New York University, and a BA in history from the University of Pennsylvania, she started her career in broadcast news. She began as an assistant film editor at NBC News in New York, but moved back to DC where she worked with Robin MacNeil and Jim Lehrer at N-PACT, the public affairs production arm of PBS. When Watergate broke, she was re-trained as an assistant director and helped produce PBS's night-time broadcasts of the hearings.
In 1978, Libby moved to Chicago to work at Burson-Marsteller, the large international public relations firm, staying until 1985 when she founded Fischer Hellmann Communications. Currently, when not writing, she conducts speaker training programs in platform speaking, presentation skills, media training, and crisis communications. Additionally, Libby also writes and produces videos.
Her first mystery novel, AN EYE FOR MURDER, which features Ellie Foreman, a video producer and single mother, was released in 2002. Publishers Weekly called it a "masterful blend of politics, history, and suspense," and it was nominated for several awards, including the Anthony. That was followed by three more novels in the Ellie Foreman series, which Libby describes as a cross between "Desperate Housewives" and "24."
A few years later, Libby introduced her second series featuring hard-boiled Chicago Private investigator Georgia Davis, whom the Chicago Tribune describes as, "a new no-nonsense detective .... tough and smart enough to give even the legendary V.I. Warshawski a run for her money." There are three books in that series so far: EASY INNOCENCE (2008) and DOUBLEBACK (2009), which was selected as a Great Lakes Booksellers' Association "2009 Great Read," and TOXICITY (2011), a police procedural ebook thriller that became the prequel to the Georgia Davis series.
SET THE NIGHT ON FIRE, (December, 2010) is a standalone thriller that goes back, in part, to the late Sixties in Chicago. Publishers Weekly describes it as "top-rate" and says, "A jazzy fusion of past and present, Hellman's insightful, politically charged whodunit explores a fascinating period in American history." It was short-listed for ForeWord Magazine's Book of 2010 in the suspense/thriller category. Her most recent stand-alone, A BITTER VEIL, which PW calls "meticulously researched and fast-paced", was released in April, 2012. It's set in revolutionary Iran during the shah's overthrow and rise of the Islamic Republic. And her latest acclaimed thriller, HAVANA LOST, spans three generations of the same family and is set largely in Cuba.
Libby has also edited a highly acclaimed crime fiction anthology, CHICAGO BLUES (October, 2007). In May, 2010, she published a collection of her own short stories called NICE GIRL DOES NOIR. In 2005-2006 she was the National President of Sisters in Crime, a 3,400 plus member organization committed to strengthening the voice of female mystery writers.
Libby hopes you visit her at her website: http://www.libbyhellmann.com
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