Andrea Mara worked for seventeen years in Dublin's IFSC before moving into freelance writing. Now she writes lifestyle features for Irish newspapers, magazines, and websites. She's won a number of best parenting blog awards for OfficeMum.ie, where she writes about the everyday chaos of bringing up her three young children.
Adriana Marais is an award-winning theoretical physicist and internationally renowned advocate for off-world exploration. Adriana was one of 100 candidates selected for Mars One, the Dutch effort to land the first humans on Mars with the plan to establish a permanent human colony.
It's possible Evie Marceau was born in the wrong time. She's always been drawn to the past, the future, other worlds—basically anywhere but the here and now. She writes fantasy to satisfy her nagging curiosity that there is more out there, just beyond the veil. She is the author of the Castles of the Eyrie series.
In July of 1947, Jesse Marcel, Jr., was a typical eleven-year-old boy who witnessed events that were anything but typical. He grew up to become a physician, a military surgeon, a pilot, a husband, a father, and a grandfather.
Tif Marcelo is a veteran army nurse and holds a BS in nursing and a master's in public administration. Her books include Once Upon a Sunset, The Key to Happily Ever After, and the Journey to the Heart series.
Nev March is the first Indian born writer to win the Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America First Crime Novel Award for her Edgar-finalist debut, Murder in Old Bombay. Nev sits on the New York chapter board of Mystery Writers of America and is a member of Crime Writers of Color.
Maggie March writes cozy mysteries that will make you laugh. Born in Cuba, she was raised on Florida's space coast. She loves the beach, time spent with family, and is always on the lookout for the perfect key lime pie recipe (but not the kind they served on Dexter).
William March (1893–1954) was an American novelist and short-story writer. His first novel, Company K, was based largely on his wartime experiences. A prolific writer of short stories, he was a four-time winner of the O. Henry Prize.