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Before Versailles by Karleen Koen
Before Versailles by Karleen Koen










Before Versailles by Karleen Koen

She titled it Now Face to Face, and described it as ""a continuation and completion of Barbara's story and it involves Tony and the themes of bonding, family and love – and I don't mean sex." Koen began work on her second novel soon after Through a Glass Darkly was purchased for print. Koen and her husband used some of this money to purchase a three-bedroom house in Houston. Naggar encouraged Koen to continue finishing the book believing it to be "the launching of a major author," Naggar mailed the manuscript to five major publishing companies Random House purchased it for a "whopping" $350,000 in August 1985, which was at the time a record for a new novelist. To gain a publisher for her work, now called Through a Glass Darkly, Koen sent the manuscript to Jean Naggar, whose name she found in Writer's Digest. The book centered on teenage noblewoman Barbara Alderley and her trials and travails as she navigates English and French society. To help pass the dull hours at home, Koen began writing a historical fiction novel on her favorite time period, the eighteenth-century. In 2011 she attended the annual conference of the Historical Novel Society alongside Diana Gabaldon and Margaret George, among others. She decided to leave in order to focus on her husband Edward Koen and her two children. Koen became the first managing editor of Houston Home & Garden, working in that capacity for five years. In 1970, she majored in English and graduated from North Texas State University. Karleen Koen ( née Smith) is an American novelist perhaps best known for her 1986 debut historical fiction novel, Through a Glass Darkly. Seventeenth and eighteenth century England and France












Before Versailles by Karleen Koen