Elizabeth Crook

Elizabeth Crook

Crook at the 2014 Texas Book Festival.
Born Elizabeth Crook
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Website
www.elizabethcrookbooks.com

Elizabeth Crook (born 1959) is an American genre novelist specializing in the Western fiction. Crook's three novels have attracted favorable reviews, and her work has been published in anthologies and periodicals such as Texas Monthly and Southwestern Historical Quarterly.[1]

Biography

Born in Houston, Crook lived in Nacogdoches and San Marcos, Texas, with her parents, brother and sister until 1966 when the family moved to Washington D.C., where her father, William H. Crook, was director of VISTA for Lyndon Johnson. Later, the family moved to Canberra, Australia, where her father was U.S. ambassador to Australia.[2]

Returning to Texas, Crook graduated from San Marcos High School in 1977. She attended Baylor University for two years and graduated from Rice University in 1982.

Outreach and awards

Crook has served on the council of the Texas Institute of Letters. She is a member of Western Writers of America and The Texas Philosophical Society, and was selected the honored writer for 2006 Texas Writers' Month, joining previous honorees O. Henry, J. Frank Dobie, John Graves, Larry McMurtry, Cormac McCarthy, Katherine Anne Porter, Elmer Kelton, Liz Carpenter, Sarah Bird, James Michener, and Horton Foote. Her first novel, The Raven's Bride, was the 2006 Texas Reads: One Book One Texas selection. The Night Journal was awarded the 2007 Spur award for Best Long Novel of the West and the 2007 Willa Literary Award for Historical Fiction. Monday, Monday received the Jesse H. Jones Fiction Award (the top prize) in the 2015 Texas Institute of Letters competition.

Two of Crook's novels (Promised Lands and The Raven's Bride) were edited at Doubleday by Jacqueline Onassis.[3]

Books by Elizabeth Crook

References

  1. "Elizabeth Crook" in Book Reporter
  2. Robert M. Thomas, "William Crook, 72, Ambassador To Australia and Johnson Aide", The New York Times, October 31, 1997
  3. William Kuhn web site, List of Books Edited by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

External links

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