Reggie Nadelson
Reggie Nadelson is a mystery and thriller author who splits her time between London and New York. She was born and brought up in Greenwich in the United Kingdom. She started schooling at the City and Country School before she attended high school at Elisabeth Irwin High School. Nadelson then went to Vassar College where she was an English major before proceeding to get her journalism degree at Stanford. After graduating from Stanford, Nadelson did all kinds of jobs in journalism and publishing many of which involved a lot of travel. She had always wanted to be a writer but never got the time to do it as she had to earn a living. She eventually ended up as a columnist for “The Guardian” and also worked for “The Independent” for a time. Reggie shifted gears when she started working for the “BBC” producing and sometimes working as a narrator for a string of documentaries. As a journalist, she writes on all manner of subjects from leisure, travel, culture, and fashion for outlets such as the “BBC,” “The Financial Times,” “Departures,” and “Conde Nast Traveller.” “Comrade Rockstar,” a book about Dean Red that was nicknamed “The Red Elvis” was her debut novel. The novel was a huge success and would have its rights purchased by Tom Hanks who intends to make it into a film. Her first work of fiction is “Red Mercury Blues,” the first of the “Artie Cohen” series of novels that she published in 1995.
Publication Order
Standalone Books
Comrade Rockstar: The Life and Mystery of Dean Reed, the All-American Boy Who Brought Rock 'n' Roll to the Soviet Union
2009
At Balthazar: The New York Brasserie at the Center of the World
2017
Marvelous Manhattan: Stories of the Restaurants, Bars, and Shops That Make This City Special
2021