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Elizabeth Lowell

Author of Amber Beach

152+ Works 25,456 Members 357 Reviews 37 Favorited

About the Author

Elizabeth Lowell is actually a pen name for the real person named Ann Charters Maxwell. Maxwell was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1944. She was educated at the University of California, Davis and the University of California, Riverside, where she received a B.A. in 1966. She married Evan show more Maxwell, a journalist, on September 4, 1966. They have published numerous novels together including The Silk Strategy, The Ruby, Steal the Sun, Redwood Empire, and The Golden Mountain. Maxwell started her writing career in 1975 with the science fiction novel Change. She has written over 60 novels and one non-fiction book. The novels range from science fiction to historical fiction, from romance to mystery to suspense. She has written under numerous pen names including A. E. Maxwell, Annalise Sun, and Lowell Charters. In 1982, she began publishing romance novels as Elizabeth Lowell. She was awarded the Romantic Times Career Achievement Award in 1994, Romance Writers of America Best Historical Romance in 1994, and the Lifetime Achievement Award in 1994. Her title Beautiful Sacrifice made The New York Times Best Seller List for 2012. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:

Ann Elizabeth Charters Maxwell wrote as Ann Maxwell, Elizabeth Lowell, Annalise Sun and Lowell Charters. As A. E. Maxwell, she wrote in collaboration with her husband Evan Maxwell.

The A. E. Maxwell author page; however the two pages should not be combined due to the existence of another author called A. E. Maxwell.

Series

Works by Elizabeth Lowell

Amber Beach (1997) 835 copies, 12 reviews
Midnight in Ruby Bayou (2000) 810 copies, 7 reviews
Pearl Cove (1999) 779 copies, 7 reviews
The Wrong Hostage (2006) 770 copies, 11 reviews
Moving Target (2001) 753 copies, 6 reviews
Jade Island (1998) 702 copies, 7 reviews
Running Scared (2002) 684 copies, 7 reviews
Always Time to Die (2005) 684 copies, 9 reviews
Die in Plain Sight (2003) 684 copies, 8 reviews
The Color of Death (2004) 670 copies, 8 reviews
Untamed (1993) 660 copies, 11 reviews
Innocent as Sin (2007) 640 copies, 15 reviews
Blue Smoke and Murder (2008) 637 copies, 22 reviews
Forbidden (1993) 618 copies, 12 reviews
Enchanted (1994) 591 copies, 7 reviews
Winter Fire (1996) 480 copies, 1 review
Death Echo (2010) 478 copies, 31 reviews
Only His (1991) 446 copies, 7 reviews
Only Mine (1992) 431 copies, 6 reviews
Only Love (1995) 430 copies, 6 reviews
Only You (1992) 428 copies, 5 reviews
Autumn Lover (1996) 412 copies, 4 reviews
Tell Me No Lies (1986) 407 copies, 8 reviews
To the Ends of the Earth (1998) 382 copies, 4 reviews
Beautiful Dreamer (2001) 377 copies, 5 reviews
A Woman Without Lies (1985) 353 copies, 5 reviews
Eden Burning (2002) 352 copies, 4 reviews
The Secret Sister (2005) 352 copies, 3 reviews
Reckless Love (1990) 349 copies, 5 reviews
Whirlpool (2006) 342 copies, 7 reviews
Forget Me Not (1984) 323 copies, 1 review
This Time Love (2003) 321 copies, 6 reviews
Remember Summer (1999) 320 copies, 1 review
Lover in the Rough (1984) 319 copies, 2 reviews
Warrior (1991) 318 copies, 3 reviews
Death is Forever (2004) 315 copies, 3 reviews
Desert Rain (1996) 314 copies, 4 reviews
Beautiful Sacrifice (2012) 292 copies, 14 reviews
Fire and Rain (1990) 288 copies, 3 reviews
Fire Dancer (1982) 286 copies, 3 reviews
Shadow and Silk (1997) 273 copies
Outlaw (1991) 273 copies, 2 reviews
Where the Heart Is (1997) 267 copies, 1 review
Granite Man (1991) 266 copies, 3 reviews
Fever (1988) 248 copies, 6 reviews
Dancer's Luck (1983) 244 copies, 1 review
Chain Lightning (1988) 243 copies, 2 reviews
Dangerous Refuge (2013) 234 copies, 8 reviews
Too Hot to Handle (1986) 228 copies, 2 reviews
Dancer's Illusion (1983) 218 copies, 1 review
Dark Fire (1988) 208 copies, 1 review
Night Diver (2014) 190 copies, 14 reviews
Sweet Wind, Wild Wind (1987) 181 copies, 3 reviews
Timeshadow Rider (1986) 173 copies, 2 reviews
Perfect Touch (2015) 164 copies, 6 reviews
Love Song for a Raven (1987) 141 copies
Change (1975) 140 copies, 1 review
The Diamond Tiger (1992) 130 copies, 1 review
The Ruby (1995) 114 copies, 1 review
A Dead God Dancing (1979) 105 copies
The Secret Sisters (1993) 100 copies
Money Burns (1991) 81 copies
The Jaws of Menx (1981) 80 copies
The Art of Survival (1989) 77 copies
Gatsby's Vineyard (1987) 70 copies
The Frog and the Scorpion (1986) 69 copies, 1 review
Name of a Shadow (1980) 68 copies
Just Enough Light to Kill (1988) 66 copies
The Fire of Spring (1986) 60 copies
The King of Nothing (1992) 58 copies
Murder Hurts (1993) 55 copies
Redwood Empire (1987) 53 copies, 1 review
Granite Man [and] Warrior (2007) 51 copies
Fire and Rain [AND] Outlaw (2007) 47 copies
Summer Games (1984) 45 copies, 1 review
Summer Thunder (1983) 40 copies
The Singer Enigma (1976) 37 copies
The Danvers Touch (1983) 36 copies
Valley of the Sun (1983) 34 copies
Traveling Man (1985) 33 copies
Thunderheart (1992) 33 copies
Sequel (1986) 32 copies
The Year-Long Day: One Man's Arctic (1976) 31 copies, 1 review
Fires of Eden (1986) 29 copies
Steal the Sun (1981) 23 copies
Golden Empire (1979) 21 copies, 1 review
The Golden Mountain (1990) 18 copies
Hechicera (2009) 3 copies, 2 reviews
The Rocking M Collection (2015) 2 copies
Amber Beach 2 copies
Foundling 1 copy
Treetops 1 copy
L'amant du nevada (1999) 1 copy
Šero a hedvábí (1999) 1 copy
(Medieval 02) Prohibido (2008) 1 copy, 1 review
(Sólo 02) Solo mía (2007) 1 copy, 1 review
(Sólo 03) Sólo tú (2007) 1 copy, 1 review
Letní závrať (2014) 1 copy
Initiation amoureuse (1999) 1 copy
Nie okłamuj mnie (1993) 1 copy

Associated Works

Finding Home (Duncan's Bride / Chain Lightning / Popcorn and Kisses) (2001) — Contributor — 93 copies, 1 review
Forever Mine (Rebellion / Reckless Love / Dark Stranger) (1998) — Contributor — 17 copies
Reckless Hearts [3-in-1] (2001) 7 copies

Tagged

contemporary (343) contemporary romance (382) ebook (293) elizabeth lowell (175) fantasy (65) fiction (1,146) hardcover (49) historical (237) historical romance (382) Kindle (114) medieval (115) mystery (454) novel (68) Only Series (51) own (131) paperback (143) PB (55) R (102) read (318) romance (2,400) romance-suspense (46) romantic suspense (473) science fiction (240) series (180) sf (57) suspense (482) thriller (114) to-read (827) unread (92) western (182)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Maxwell, Ann Elizabeth Charters
Other names
Maxwell, Ann
Sun, Annalise
Lowell, Elizabeth (with Evan Maxwell)
Charters, Lowell (with Evan Maxwell)
Maxwell, A. E. (with Evan Maxwell)
Birthdate
1944-04-05
Gender
female
Education
University of California, Riverside (BA|English Literature|1966)
Occupations
romance novelist
Awards and honors
Romance Writers of America (Lifetime Achievement Award, 1994)
Relationships
Maxwell, Evan (husband)
Lowell, Heather (daughter)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Places of residence
Madison, Wisconsin, USA (birth)
Pacific Northwest
Washington, USA
Disambiguation notice
Ann Elizabeth Charters Maxwell wrote as Ann Maxwell, Elizabeth Lowell, Annalise Sun and Lowell Charters. As A. E. Maxwell, she wrote in collaboration with her husband Evan Maxwell.

The A. E. Maxwell author page; however the two pages should not be combined due to the existence of another author called A. E. Maxwell.
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Discussions

Reviews

411 reviews
The second book in the St. Kilda series was another excellent romantic suspense title. Federal Judge Grace Silva has a problem. Her fourteen-year-old son Lane is being held hostage in a Mexican boarding school until his father - Grace's ex-husband - returns the drug money he scammed from some Mexican cartels.

The problem is that the ex has disappeared and doesn't care about Lane anyway since he wasn't Lane's father. With a short timeline, Grace has to find a way to get her son away from those show more who want him dead. She turns to Joe Faroe who, unknown to himself, is Lane's father and is the one regret in Grace's life.

Joe has recently left St. Kilda after years spent in the shadows. The final straw came when a friend betrayed him, and he had to kill him. But Grace is the one regret in Joe's life too and he can't turn down her plea for help.

This action-packed thriller had me reading the story in one sitting and finishing at 3:30AM. I loved the tension between Joe and Grace. I also loved that Lane was a well-developed character with mad hacking skills and a strong love for the man who didn't care even a little about him.
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Glad I finished this trilogy and got to see Simon’s journey with Ariane. None of these guys really deserve these women though, and the ending here was just as abrupt as the others. I feel as though the magic represented here took precedence over any character arcs because I would have loved to learn more about Ariane’s Learned gift rather than how wretched most of the men here are. Also it was difficult to deal with the fact that the entire premise was focused around a rape. Final show more thought is wondering why Erik doesn’t get a story (unless he does, and my library doesn’t have it). show less
Elizabeth Lowell is one of my auto-buy romantic suspense authors. I can never wait for the paperbacks either, so I just grin and shell out the $ for the hardcovers 'cause I know she'll provide a few hours of good reading now and I'll re-read it at least once every couple of years when I'm in need of a Lowell 'fix'! "Blue Smoke and Murder" is her latest and it's a headrush of action and tension from start to finish.

The entire events of the book take place over a little less than two show more months...BUT, the real action and 9/10 of the book takes place in 5 days. Just reading it about gave me a heart attack and I didn't want to put it down 'til I knew what would happen next and...well, I'm sure you can guess how that went!

The book opens with the murder of a fiesty 90-year-old woman. She's our heroine's Aunt Mercy and I was actually sorry we didn't get to hear more from her as she was a hell of a dame! But our heroine is Mercy's heir. Her name's Jill and she's a river guide who happened to save the life of two top St. Kilda Consulting operatives' son. She pocketed the card they gave her figuring she'd never need it...but of course she does...and pretty darn quickly too. Part of her inheritance is a set of 13 paintings. When she does some research, it appears that one of those paintings may have caused her aunts murder. So she uses her card and in steps Zach.

Zach is quite the character. Smart, rugged, and handily enough, an art expert. He pilots Jill through the white water of greed, lies, politics, and murder that makes up the world of high ticket art collections. Neither of their lives will ever be the same.

Another read I couldn't put down from Elizabeth Lowell. If you like Coulter, Johansen, or Brown...you owe it to yourself to pick up a copy of "Blue Smoke and Murder". I bet you'll get hooked too.
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*This is a TBRChallenge review, there will be spoilers, I don't spoil everything but enough, because I treat these reviews as a bookclub discussion.

Y'all, how am I picking these insane books for the TBRChallenge every year??? What kind of a gold mine tbr am I sitting on?!? Anyway, this review is a couple days late because this turned out to be 570ish pages of an HBO limited series. I feel wrung-out but less because of emotional wreckage, as I was with The Lotus Palace, and more just my god show more that was A STORY. I'm not sure how I'm going to talk about this so, long story short, twist and turns spy romance about possible stolen Chinese bronze statues that is a sticky web with multiple parts made by multiple spiders as the People's Republic of China is newish Communists with some liking that and others not and, of course, the United States wanting to stick their noses in there. A museum curator gets thrown in the mix with only a former CIA spy to help her out. Mind games of is it real or not. If you liked something along the lines of HBO's Chernobyl but with Romance!, and want to take reading slower and get immersed in the world, find this and pick it up.

Grab a glass of wine, thank your lucky stars you're not in a book club with me, and let the rambling begin...

"Is there really a possibility that relations between the U.S. and China could be destroyed over the Qin bronzes?"

The story opens with Catlin as he's presented with half an ancient Chinese coin. He's a retired CIA spy who deep undercover went by the name Jacques-Pierre Rousseau. Some think Rousseau is dead and others think he's now involved in a Pacific Rim Foundation. Catlin, real name Jacob MacArthur, is not happy to have the half a coin presented to him. It's a debt he owes for when his life was saved when the woman he thought he loved and loved him almost murdered him on the orders from Tran, a pimp and smuggler in IndoChina. Chen Yi is the one calling in the favor from Catlin, and Comrade Minister of Archaeology, Province of Shaanxi, People's Republic of China. It's come to the attention of the new government that rumors of a charioteer, chariot, and horses inlaid in gold and silver from the, supposed to be reburied, ancient Emperor Qin's grave are going to be up for sale in America.

Look, this was published in 1986, so I'll forgive people if they're not up on their history of the political atmosphere at this time (I had to go brush up myself after I read about 30% of this). Suffice to say that not all Chinese are a fan of the Western capitalism or communism turn their country is taking, so we have a pit of Mao purists and Deng progressives, with Chinese Nationalists from Taiwan and the United States wanting to keep an eye on communist China thrown into the overreaching arch of the story. (in case it needs to be said, this is Fiction, so yeah, grain of salt) It all boils down to does the bronze charioteer exist to be sold, who is selling it, and what is the network that got it to the United States. Chen ropes Catlin into this because of his undercover persona and familiarity of the culture. Chen wants Catlin to be a bodyguard for a Lindsay Danner.

There were parts of her childhood she had forgotten how to remember. There were other parts that she remembered only in dreams and woke up screaming and wondering why.

Lindsay was born in China and raised there until twelve years old by Christian missionary parents. With the recent death of her mother (her father already died years ago) her nightmares of an incident when she was seven are keeping her up at night. She thinks her uncle was killed but she can't really remember anything. As the curator of Ancient Chinese Bronzes for the Museum of the Asias and an uncanny ability to tell real bronze from frauds, her reputation is spotless. It's obvious to the reader that Chen is maneuvering things to have Lindsay picked, by the FBI that is allowing and working with Chen to conduct a mission to find out if there are Qin bronzes for sale and if they're real, but the reader doesn't know why, just that he wants Catlin to prepare and protect her for the quagmire she's about to get involved with. Catlin meets Lindsay and instantly thinks she's too innocent to get involved in having to do what needs to be done for the mission and their connection definitely tells romance readers something could flare up between the two. Lindsay sees the mission as a way to keep relations between China and the US good, so even though she's going to have to ruin her reputation as an honest bronze dealer, pretending to fall so in love with Catlin that she'll buy smuggled bronzes for him, thus getting the possible smugglers to contact them so everyone can find out the truth of who and how of a possible smuggling operation.

"If she is hurt, most honorable Chen Yi, you will wish that you had not gone fishing with a dragon."

Just know, my quick simplifying of political webs and relations is actually covered in the 500 pages of intricate character relations and building that slowly gets covered and revealed with new players and layers. Catlin does his best to prepare Lindsay for the ramifications of ruining her reputation while trying to keep his eyes on all the players, moves, and getting pulled in with his feelings for Lindsay. The FBI is represented by the head of counterintelligence, Stone, and his Special Agent O'Donnell. They have their own long scenes, especially towards the end where they are trying to keep shadows on Catlin and Lindsay as they are being driven to the ultimate moment to discover if the bronzes are real and who the players are. It's a scene that did heighten the stress and danger but also made me want to skim read. Which is what I battled sometimes in this book. Newer published contemporary, vast majority, just doesn't have this slower meticulous overreaching plot. At times I was celebrating the completeness, adding in and at others I felt like I was warring against the newer genre tone and beat I have been trained in as I thought the story had some bloat. This is a story you're going to have to want to invest in and take slower, it just is. I enjoyed the hell out of that at times and others, yeah, bloat.

From now on she would know that she could touch Catlin all the time-and believe him none of the time.

Lindsay and Catlin had full backstories but as they're more doled out and almost to the background, sometimes chapters later my mind would be like, oh yeah, they've both been married and divorced, Catlin was involved in the fall of Saigon, and more front and center, Lindsay's incomplete memory of how her uncle died. It's more slow reveals, Lindsay's incomplete memory is one of the strands to the web and Catlin's background, namely his emotional Baggage (and you didn't think I was going to get the TBRChallenge monthly theme in there, shame on you), plays into the romance aspect as they spend all the time together and are slowly falling for each other for real as they pretend. I loved the touching these two had between each other and their bedroom scenes. So much now seems to be slamming to get to the orgasm, the destination, the touching between these two was all about the journey. To Catch a Raven by Beverly Jenkins is a newer publication that I enjoyed the intimacy between leads but because the characters are more slowly developed throughout the story, I would say these two don't start off with intimacy but it builds and their last sex scene was incredibly hot because of this building (thank you for that previous work because otherwise the snap crotch thingy Lindsay was wearing and the why did you have to remind me mustache of Catlin would have been a personal buzzkill).

"Christ, Lindsay," he grated, "we'll burn down the night."

Around 70% Lindsay remembers the full story of her nightmares and more is learned about some characters, I feel like romance genre readers will have an idea about what's really going on with one of them. The ending brings everyone together, Chen, FBI, a father figure of Lindsay's, and the truth of the bronzes. It's a scene that, after a dangerous decision Lindsay comes to, kind of ends somewhat air out of balloon feeling as Catlin is too good at his job. Catlin then gives into his emotional baggage (ha, again!) and we get a “How could this possibly end in a HEA???” Just kidding, even with only 5% romance readers can't be fooled and I actually loved how this ended.

As Lindsay looked down at the small, ancient coin, her breath caught and she went very still. The halves had been welded together, revealing the complete outline of a flying bird.

But yeah, I'm wrung-out from all the layers, players, and just general full story, I'm stuffed! The political intrigue, who's lying and maneuvering, the romance, trying to discern the truth behind Catlin's motivations and feelings, and just general tv limited series feel of it all. If you're in for a 1986 published fictional book about political relations with China, told in cover with spies and ancient bronzes in a romance genre world, this book was an experience.

*Did Sam Wang ever get his own story??? I Need it.
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Statistics

Works
152
Also by
4
Members
25,456
Popularity
#821
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
357
ISBNs
975
Languages
14
Favorited
37

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