Julia Kenner, an American author of love novels, a lawyer by training, first declared herself as an author in 2000 and since then creates creations with incredible working ability. In 2004, she decided to leave law and move into the book market, focusing on writing books. The young and successful writer managed to acquire a corresponding plume of rating literary awards. Julia is a winner of USA Today Bestselling Author and Waldenbooks Bestselling Author, a finalist for RITA (American Novel Writers
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Julia Kenner, an American author of love novels, a lawyer by training, first declared herself as an author in 2000 and since then creates creations with incredible working ability. In 2004, she decided to leave law and move into the book market, focusing on writing books.
The young and successful writer managed to acquire a corresponding plume of rating literary awards. Julia is a winner of USA Today Bestselling Author and Waldenbooks Bestselling Author, a finalist for RITA (American Novel Writers Award) and a winner of the Romantic Times' Reviewer's Choice Award for Best Contemporary Paranormal in 2001.
Five years after the release of the first book, Julia decided to try on a more dynamic genre and create a female thriller. In June 2005, the novel The Givenchy Code, published by Downtown Press, rose to the top of the USA TODAY literary rating.
With her creativity, Julia Kenner resembles a multifunctional unit for creating a mass product. The structure of texts by simple circumcision allows you to quickly adapt the book to the film version. Critics point to mathematical calculations in the Givenchy Code, alluding to a publicly unauthorised collaboration with at least a mathematics professor. Love and orgasmic scenes and the compilation of worn-out detective themes in Kenner’s product makes this action in the full sense popular in the segment, as they say, readers of Cosmopolitan. The reference to the more popular "Da Vinci Code" of this product is also quite functional, as well as the previously produced under the brand Kenner love novel "The Spy Who Loves Me" to the title of the film from the Bond.
As soon as the Givenchy Code passed the peak of sales, Kenner launched a sequel to the Manolo Matrix trilogy. And in 2007, the readers fell on the third (and last?) part of the thriller – “Prada Paradox”. /