Rachel Howzell Hall

Rachel Howzell Hall

Rachel Howzell Hall has written at least 20 books. Their most popular book is These Toxic Things with 40 saves with an average rating of 2.5⭐.

They are best known for writing in the genres Fiction, Literature, and Mystery.

Adventurous, mysterious, and tense are their most common moods.

Author Bio

Rachel was born in Los Angeles, California. As a child, she kept a pen in her hand, writing everywhere—in notebooks, on loose-leaf paper, in her big brother’s prep-school yearbook and on the back of church bulletins. But never on walls, buildings or freeway overpasses. That is graffiti.

For four years, she lived in the forest at UC Santa Cruz. There, she received a degree in English and American Literature, and helped to charter the Pi Upsilon Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Incorporated.

Back in Los Angeles, she’s worked in Development for esteemed organizations, including PEN Center USA West, ACLU of Southern California, City of Hope and Cedars-Sinai.

In 2002, Rachel’s debut novel, A Quiet Storm, was published by Scribner to great notice, and was chosen as a “Rory’s Book Club” selection, the must-read book list for fictional television character Rory Gilmore of The Gilmore Girls.

She is the critically acclaimed author and a two-time Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist of the Amazon Charts- and Wall Street Journal bestseller, We Lie Here and And Now She’s Gone, which was also nominated for the Lefty-, Barry- and Anthony Awards. A New York Times bestselling author of The Good Sister with James Patterson, Rachel is an Anthony-, International Thriller Writers- and Lefty Award nominee and the author of What Fire Brings, What Never Happened, These Toxic Things, They All Fall Down, Land of Shadows, Skies of Ash, Trail of Echoes and City of Saviors in the Detective Elouise Norton series as well as the author of the bestselling Audible Originals, How It Ends and See How They Run.

Her shorter works have appeared in Alta Magazine, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Shattering Glass and Unoccupied Earth. Her short story, “Clout Chaser,” was a nominee for the British Crime Writers Association’s Short Story Dagger Award.

Rachel is a former member of the board of directors for Mystery Writers of America and has been a featured writer on NPR’s acclaimed Crime in the City series and the National Endowment for the Arts weekly podcast; she has also served as a mentor with Sisters in Crime, Pitch Wars and the Association of Writers Programs.

She lives in L.A. with her husband and daughter.