Cassie Edwards

Cassie Edwards
Born 1936
Occupation novelist
Nationality American
Period 1982 – present
Genre Historical romance
Website
www.cassieedwards.com

Cassie Edwards is a best-selling American author of over 100 historical romance novels. She has been published by Dorchester Publishing, Signet Books, Kensington Publishing and Harlequin.[1]

Biography

Edwards began writing romances in 1982 and released her 100th novel, Savage Skies, on August 28, 2007.[2] Although her earlier books were classic historical romances, the vast majority of her novels involve Native American tribes.[2] Edwards's grandmother was Cheyenne.[3] Her first 99 books sold a combined 10 million copies as of August 2007, with her more recent novels averaging sales of 250,000350,000 copies.[2]

Edwards has won the Romantic Times Lifetime Achievement Award and the Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award, as well as being named one of Affaire de Coeur's top ten favorite romance writers. Edwards has a reputation for meticulously researching the proper anthropological backgrounds of each tribe she writes about.[1]

Edwards and her husband Charles, a retired high school biology teacher, have been married for over 50 years. They have two sons, Charles and Brian, and three grandchildren. The family lived in St. Louis, Missouri for over thirty years, but now reside in Mattoon, Illinois.

Plagiarism allegations

On 7 January 2008, the romance-novel review blog Smart Bitches, Trashy Books[4] accused Edwards of widespread plagiarism after finding multiple passages in her novels that appeared to be directly taken from various works by other authors, including novels, poems, reference books, and websites about Native American history and culture.[1] Many of the passages came from old references, many without copyright or with expired copyright protection.[4][5] One of Edwards' publishers, Signet, initially defended the passages in question as fair use rather than copyright infringement.[1]

Nora Roberts, herself a victim of plagiarism, joined the outcry.[6] Two days later, Signet announced that they would be reviewing all of Edwards' books that they published to determine whether plagiarism had occurred,[7] and, in April 2008, Signet stopped publishing Edwards' books "due to irreconcilable editorial differences."[8] In an interview, Edwards said that she did not know she was supposed to credit sources, and her husband stated that Edwards gained ideas from her reference works but did not "lift passages".[7]

Partial bibliography

Chippewa

  1. Savage Torment (1982)
  2. Savage Obsession (1983)
  3. Savage Innocence (1984)
  4. Savage Heart (1985)
  5. Savage Paradise (1987)

Savage Secrets

  1. Savage Surrender (1987)
  2. Savage Eden (1988)
  3. Savage Bliss (1990)
  4. Savage Dream (1990)
  5. Savage Splendor (1991)
  6. Savage Whispers (1991)
  7. Savage Dance (1991)
  8. Savage Persuasion (1991)
  9. Savage Promise (1992)
  10. Savage Mists (1992)
  11. Savage Sunrise (1993)
  12. Savage Pride (2000)

Wild Arizona

  1. Wild Ecstasy (1992)
  2. Wild Splendor (1993)
  3. Wild Desire (1994)
  4. Wild Abandon (1994)
  5. Wild Rapture (1995)
  6. Wild Embrace (1995)

Savage

Wild Tribes

  1. Wild Bliss (1995)
  2. Wild Thunder (1995)
  3. Wild Whispers (1996)
  4. Wind Walker (2004)

Stand alone novels

Omnibus

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Andriani, Lynn (January 9, 2008), "Romance Blog Suggests Romance Writer's Plagiarism; Signet Says Its Fair Use", Publishers Weekly, archived from the original on January 13, 2008, retrieved 2008-01-09
  2. 1 2 3 "Edwards Pens 100th Romance", Publishers Weekly, 2007-08-20, archived from the original on January 18, 2008, retrieved 2008-01-08
  3. eReader.com: Author: Cassie Edwards Archived September 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  4. 1 2 Tan, Candy; Wendell, Sarah (2008-01-11). "A centralized document for the Cassie Edwards situation". Smart Bitches. Retrieved 2009-07-20.
  5. Lundin, Leigh (2008-05-11). "The Case of the Purloined Prose". Scandal Sheets. Criminal Brief. Retrieved 2009-07-20.
  6. Nora Roberts: 'It seems clear' author plagiarized, CNN, 2008-01-10
  7. 1 2 Italie, Hillel (January 11, 2008), Publisher Reviewing Plagiarism Claims, Associated Press
  8. Italie, Hillel (April 18, 2008), Romance writer, publisher split up over plagiarism claims, Associated Press.
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