Fae Rowen discovered the romance genre after years as a sci fi freak. Writing futuristics and medieval paranormals, she jokes that she can live anywhere but the present. As a mathematician, she knows it’s a lot more fun to define your world and its rules then watch what happens.
Punished, oh-no, that’s published as a co-author of a math textbook, she yearns to hear personal stories about finding love from those who read her books, rather than horrors of arithmetic lessons gone wrong. She swears her two Siamese cats can tell time (4 p.m. = dinner) and is grateful for good friends who remind her to do the practical things in life like grocery shop, show up at the airport for a flight and pay bills.
Fae Rowen began writing after reading her favorite author’s entire backlist in three weeks and couldn’t bear the thought of waiting nine months for the next book. The sword-wielding hero that was in her head every night seemed like a good start. A “hard” scientist who avoided writing classes like the plague, she now enjoys sharing her brain with characters who demand that their stories be told. Amazing, gifted critique partners keep her on the straight and narrow.
Copyright © 2023 Writers In The Storm - All Rights Reserved
[...] by Fae Rowen [...]
[...] part brought to you by Laura Drake. Check back Monday when Fae Rowen presents the opposite [...]
[...] my critique group, which is made up of the founding members of Writers In The Storm – D.A. Watt, Fae Rowen, Laura Drake and Sharla Rae. I don’t know what I’d do without these ladies, and certainly my [...]
[...] Monday, our own Fae Rowen took on the Inspiration half of this discussion, brilliantly. You can read it [...]
[...] by Fae Rowen [...]
[...] first part is brought to you by Laura Drake. Check back next Wednesday when Fae Rowen presents the opposite [...]
[...] Fae Rowen - writes Science Fiction, Futuristic Romance. Fae Rowen discovered the romance genre after years as a sci-fi freak. Writing futuristics and medieval paranormals, she jokes that she can live anywhere but the present. As a mathematician, she knows it’s a lot more fun to define your world and its rules then watch what happens. [...]
[...] by Fae Rowen [...]
[...] by Fae Rowen [...]
[...] by Fae Rowen [...]