- Niobia Bryant
-
Niobia Simone Bryant Pen name Niobia Bryant,
Meesha Mink,
Simone BryantOccupation Writer Nationality American Ethnicity African-American Alma mater Seton Hall University Period 2000 - present Genres Romance,
Fiction,
Urban fiction,
YA Fiction
niobiabryant.comNiobia Bryant (born November 24 in Newark, New Jersey) is an African-American novelist of both romance and mainstream fiction. She also writes Urban fiction as Meesha Mink and Young Adult fiction as Simone Bryant.
Contents
Biography
Niobia Bryant was born and raised in the Central Ward of Newark, New Jersey[1] to Letha and Ernest. She has one brother, Caleb. Bryant reveals her mother's struggles to raise them alone while her father fought a drug addiction.[1] She credits her mother for introducing her to books at an early age.[1]
Bryant was educated in the Newark Public Schools system and graduated from University High School, eventually earning a Bachelor of Science in Nursing and a Bachelor of Arts in Social and Behavioral Science with an accompanying Psychology minor from Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey[2]
Bryant reportedly finished her first book, an African-American romance she entitled Down Home Girl in 1999 and submitted it to several publishers. After offers from two publishing houses, she accepted the deal with BET Book/Arabesque. The title was changed to Admission of Love and her debut was released August 2000 to rave reviews. Her second book from BET Books, Three Times a Lady (2001), became her first national bestseller.[2] In 2003 Three Times a Lady was selected by the Books for the Blind (Talking Books) program to be transcribed into an audio recording supplied free of charge to people who are blind or visually impaired.[3]
Since her 2000 debut, Bryant's romance books have consistently received top reviews, hit bestseller lists, been released as audiobooks and/or book club feature selections, and garnered award nominations/wins.
In 2007, her first mainstream Live and Learn was published by Kensington Publishing. In her mainstream books the subject matter steered away from the happily ever after of romance and took on more complex and darker themes like adultery, drug addiction, and domestic violence.
In 2008, Bryant teamed up with a fellow romance author to write the urban fiction Hoodwives series for Simon & Schuster/Touchstone. Writing as Meesha Mink and De'Nesha Diamond, their first collaboration, Desperate Hoodwives, was released in January 2008, followed by Shameless Hoodwives in August 2008, and the highly anticipated The Hood Life in January 2009. The books have been featured in many national publications and has received critical praise for the writers' skill at storytelling and character development. The New York Post listed Desperate Hoodwives as Required Reading and Essence magazine listed Shameless Hoodwives as one of their "Top Ten Summer Sizzlers" in 2008.[4] In 2011 she will release her first solo project as Meesha Mink for Simon & Schuster/Touchstone, Real Wifeys: On The Grind, the first in a new trilogy about three wifeys from three different hoods who each fight their own demons.[5] Book 2 of the Real Wifeys trilogy, Real Wifeys: Get Money, will be published January 10, 2012. The Hoodwives websites credits Bryant with saying:
"The stories about inner cities needs to be as diverse as the people who live in these environments. Growing up on 16th Ave in Newark all my life, I know in a one block radius you could either have a single mother or a married couple raising their family, dope dealers or people working forty hours a week, a homeowner or someone renting a low income apartment. For me, urban fiction isn’t about glorifying the negatives in the ‘hood, but simply telling the real stories that do exist. As a writer and a reader I can always respect the gift of storytelling of ALL stories.”
On her website Bryant calls herself "A chameleon of the written word".[2] With the addition of her upcoming YA series for Harlequin Enterprises/Kimani Press Tru line,[6] written for the pre-teen through teen readers, Bryant now has the distinct honor of writing simultaneously in four different genres for three powerhouse publishers: Simon & Schuster (urban fiction), Kensington Publishing (romance and commercial mainstream fiction), and Harlequin Enterprises (Young Adult fiction).
Bryant felt the addition of Young Adult fiction was necessary because her under-aged family members were anxious to read one of her books. Feeling her romance, mainstream, and urban fiction were too mature for them, she created the Pace Academy series centered around the Pacesetters clique and a fictional private school for celebkids.[7] The first book in the series, FABULOUS, was released February 2010, and book two FAMOUS was released January 2011. The third book in the series, GLAMOROUS, will be released in late 2012.
Currently Bryant writes full time, splitting her time between New Jersey and South Carolina.[8]
Bibliography
Writing as Niobia Bryant (Romance-Mass Market Paperbacks)
- Admission of Love (2000) BET Books/ Arabesque
- Three Times a Lady (2001) BET Books/ Arabesque
- Heavenly Match (2004) BET Books/ Arabesque
- Can't Get Next to You (2005) BET Books/Arabesque
- Let's Do it Again (2005) Harlequin/Arabesque
- Heated (2006) Kensington/Dafina Romance
- You Never Know(2006) Harlequin/Arabesque (Anthology Collaboration)
- Count on This (2006) Harlequin/Arabesque
- Hot Like Fire (2007) Kensington/Dafina Romance
- More and More (2009) Red Rose Publishing (Charity Anthology)
- Make You Mine (2009) Kensington/ Dafina Romance
- Give Me Fever (2010) Kensington/Dafina Romance
- The Hot Spot (8/2011) Kensington/Dafina Romance
- Heat Wave (7/2011) Kensington/Dafina (Anthology)
- Red Hot (9/2012) Kensington/Dafina Romance
Writing as Niobia Bryant (Mainstream-Trade Sized Paperback)- Live and Learn (2007) Kensington/ Dafina (Reissued as Mass Market 2/2010)
- Show and Tell (2008) Kensington/ Dafina (Reissued as Mass Market 5/2011)
- Message From a Mistress (2010) Kensington/ Dafina
- Mistress No More (6/2011) Kensington/Dafina
- Reckless (5/2012) Kensington/Dafina (Anthology)
- Mistress, Inc. (6/2012)Kensington/Dafina
Writing as Niobia Simone (Erotica)
- Caramel Flava edited by Zane (2006) Simone & Schuster/Atria (Anthology Collaboration)
Writing as Meesha Mink (Urban Fiction)
- Desperate Hoodwives (1/2008) Simon & Schuster/Touchstone
- Shameless Hoodwives (8/2008) Simon & Schuster/Touchstone
- The Hood Life (1/2009) Simon & Schuster/Touchstone
- Real Wifeys: On The Grind (1/2011) Simon & Schuster/Touchstone (solo debut)
- Real Wifeys: Get Money (1/2012) Simon & Schuster/Touchstone (solo)
Writing as Simone Bryant (Young Adult/YA fiction)
- FABULOUS: A Pace Academy novel (2/2010) Harlequin/Kimani Tru
- FAMOUS: A Pace Academy novel (1/2011) Harlequin/Kimani Tru
- GLAMOROUS: A Pace Aademy novel (9/2012) Harlequin/Kimani Tru
Awards
- Winner- Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award/ Best African-American Romance (2009)
- Winner- eHarlequin's Reader's Choice Award/ Favorite Steamy Novel (2006)
- Winner- Romance in Color's Reviewers' Choice Award/ Anthology of the Year (2006)
- Winner- Romance in Color’s Reader’s Favorite Award/ Best Multi-Cultural Romance
- Winner- Romance in Color's Reader's Favorite Award/ Favorite New Author (2000)
- Two-time Winner—Shades of Romance Award/Best African-American Romance
- Nominee - Romance Slam Jam Emma Award / Best Steamy Romance (2010)
- Nominee - African-American Literary Awards/ Best Romance (2006)
- Nominee- Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award/ Best African-American Romance (2005)
- Multiple Nominee—Romance Slam Jam’s Emma Award (Various categories)
- Awarded Romantic Times Top Pick (4 OUT 5 RELEASES)
References
External links
Categories:- Living people
- African American novelists
- American romantic fiction writers
- Urban fiction
- Writers of young adult literature
- People from Essex County, New Jersey
- People from Newark, New Jersey
- Seton Hall University alumni
- African American female writers
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