Kate Lehrer (born Kate Tom Staples; December 17, 1939) is an American writer, novelist and book reviewer from Washington, D.C., and a panelist on the Diane Rehm Book Club on National Public Radio. She is the widow of fellow writer and journalist Jim Lehrer.
Literary career
Lehrer has written four novels, as well as numerous short stories, essays, and book reviews. Her first novel, Best Intentions, was published in 1987.[1]When They Took Away the Man in the Moon came out in 1993.[2]Out of Eden, which won the Western Heritage Award for Outstanding Novel, was published in 1996.[3]Confessions of a Bigamist: A Novel, described by the Washington Post as whimsical and droll, was published in 2004.[4]
^Coffey, Jerry (June 27, 1993). "Novelists go on the road Jim, Kate Lehrer tour together to promote their latest books". The Kansas City Star. pp. J10. Retrieved 12 April 2010. Kate Lehrer, whose first novel, Best Intentions, was a best seller in 1987, draws upon her own background in When They Took Away the Man in the Moon, about a political consultant forced to confront her past when a family emergency sends her home to Texas. (Payment required.)
^"Jim and Kate Lehrer to get honorary degrees". The Sun. Baltimore, Md. May 16, 2004. pp. 8.B. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved April 12, 2010. Kate Lehrer, a writer and founding member of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation Board, received the Western Heritage Award for Outstanding Novel of 1996 for her book, Out of Eden. (Payment required.)
^"Review by Publishers Weekly Review". Publishers Weekly (Reed Business Information). DC Public Library. Archived from the original on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2010. In her intelligent, mannered style, Lehrer (When They Took Away the Man in the Moon) ably portrays social pressures and conventions of the period and writes well-nuanced dialogue.