Anne Perry

Anne Perry's Victorian mysteries have launched her into millionaire status, a status she maintains by continuing to produce mystery novels out of her home in Scotland. From the time she was a child, Perry wanted to be a writer but her dreams were nearly shattered as a teenager.

When she was 15, she and a friend murdered the friend's mother in New Zealand, a crime for which Perry (whose name was then Juliet Hulme) served several years in prison. Upon her release, she left New Zealand and took up a new life under the name of Anne Perry. In 1994, Anne Perry's past as Juliet Hulme was outted by an investigative reporter inspired by Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson'smovie, Heavenly Creatures.

Perry spent some time in the United States where she converted to Mormonism. She returned to England, the land of her birth in the 70s and her first novel was published in 1979. From there she launched two popular series, the Thomas and Charlotte Pitt series and the William Monk series.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Thomas and Charlotte Pitt series
Edited
The Cater Street Hangman
Callander Square
 
Paragon Walk
William Monk Series
Resurrection Row
The Face of a Stranger
Rutland Place
A Dangerous Mourning
Bluegate Fields
Defend and Betray
Death in the Devil's Acre
A Sudden Fearful Death
Cardington Crescent
The Sins of the Wolf
Silence in Hanover Close
Cain His Brother
Bethlehem Road
Weighed in the Balance
Highgate Rise
The Silent Cry
Belgrave Square
A Breach of Promise
Farriers Lane
The Twisted Root
The Hyde Park Headsman
Slaves of Obsession
Traitors Gate
Funeral in Blue
Pentecost Alley
Death of a Stranger
Ashworth Hall
The Shifting Tide
Brunswick Gardens
Dark Assassins
Bedford Square
 
Half Moon Street
Other Novels
The Whitechapel Conspiracy
Tathea
Southampton Row
A Dish Taken Cold
Seven Dials
No Graves as Yet
A Christmas Journey
Come Armageddon
Seven Dials
Fashionable Funeral
Long Spoon Lane
One Thing More
 
Naked From the Phoenix
World War I
Letters from the Highlands
No Graves As Of Yet: 1914
 
Shoulder the Sky: 1915
 
Angels in the Gloom: 1916
 
At Some Disputed Barricade: 1917
 
We Shall Not Sleep: 1918