Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Katherine Reay is the national bestselling and award-winning author of Dear Mr. Knightley, Lizzy & Jane, The Bronte Plot, A Portrait of Emily Price, The Austen Escape and The Printed Letter Bookshop ...

    • Books

      A Shadow in Moscow. A betrayal at the highest level risks...

    • The Berlin Letters

      The Berlin Letters. Bestselling author Katherine Reay...

    • The London House

      The London House. An uncovered family secret sets one woman...

    • A Shadow in Moscow

      A Shadow in Moscow. A betrayal at the highest level risks...

  2. A Shadow in Moscow. A betrayal at the highest level risks the lives of two courageous female spies: MI6’s best Soviet spy and the CIA’s newest Moscow recruit. As the KGB closes in, a compromise must be struck if either woman hopes to survive. READ MORE.

  3. Feb 19, 2024 · Katherine Reay is the national bestselling and award-winning author of several novels and one full length non-fiction work. Katherine holds a BA and MS from Northwestern University and is a wife, mother, rehabbing runner, former marketer, and avid chocolate consumer.

    • (66.7K)
    • Katherine Reay
  4. Katherine Reay has 13 books on Goodreads with 217419 ratings. Katherine Reays most popular book is Dear Mr. Knightley.

  5. Katherine Reay is a national bestselling and award-winning author of several novels and one work of nonfiction. For her fiction, Katherine writes love letters to books, and her novels are saturated with what she calls the “world of books.”

  6. May 12, 2020 · Katherine Reay is the national bestselling and award-winning author of Dear Mr. Knightley, Lizzy and Jane, The Brontë Plot, A Portrait of Emily Price, The Austen Escape, The Printed Letter Bookshop, and her latest novel, Of Literature and Lattes.

  7. People also ask

  8. Nov 5, 2013 · Katherine Reay. 3.93. 17,262 ratings3,073 reviews. Dear Mr. Knightley is a contemporary epistolary novel with a delightful dash of Jane Austen. Samantha Moore survived years of darkness in the foster care system by hiding behind her favorite characters in literature, even adopting their very words.