Biography
Jill MacLean was born on 1941 in England, UK. In 1950, her family moved to Nova Scotia, Canada.
After receiving her Bachelor of Science with honours from Dalhousie University, she married. She worked at the Fisheries Research Board until her daughter was born. Following the birth of her son, she was employed by the pathology laboratory of Sydney City Hospital and the biology department of Mount Allison University. More recently, she completed a Masters in Theological Studies at the Atlantic School of Theology; her thesis juxtaposed Hebrew concepts of chaos in the book of Job with modern chaos theory.
When her husband joined the Armed Forces as a chaplain, she had to stop working. They moved three times in the first 18 months, the last move was to Prince Edward Island. By then her children were in school; she couldn't get a job; and at the local bridge club, she kept forgetting not to trump her partner's ace.
However, she had always loved to read, fascinated by the lure of being drawn into the other world of the story. So one day she bought a dozen Harlequin novels, read and analyzed them, then sat down and wrote one. Her first book, To Trust My Love, typed with four fingers, was published in 1974 as Sandra Field (she believes she's curiously the first Canadian to write for Harlequin). During the four years she lived in Prince Edward Island, she researched an 18th century French settlement located near present-day Brudenell, resulting in a historical book, Jean Pierre Roma, published in 1977 under her real name. She also started to write in collaboration with other Martimer writer under the pseudonym Jan MacLean. She also used to singed her novels the pseudonym of Jocelyn Haley. Her pseudonyms was an attempt to prevent the congregation from finding out what the chaplain's wife was up to in her spare time.
Before she turned 40, her life was changed, she had lost three of the most important women in her life: her mother and sister to illness, and her seventeen-year-old daughter to a car accident, and she separated from her husband in 1976. One of the lasting legacies of the grief caused by these losses has been the idea that it is impossible and undesirable to live every waking moment in the knowledge that loss can strike at any time.
She's been very fortunate for years to be able to combine a love of travel (particularly to the north - she doesn't do heat well) with her writing, by describing settings that most people will probably never visit. And there's always the challenge of making the heroine's long underwear sound romantic. Her novels has been translated into Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, Italian, Greek, Dutch, Swedish, Yugoslavian, Japanese... and sold in more than 90 countries. Her first collection of poetry, The Brevity of Red, was published in 2003. When her nine-years-old grandson, Stuart, asked him a book for him, she wrote her first Children's book and decided continued writing this type of books.
Jill now lives in Bedford, Nova Scotia, and she's lived most of her life in the Maritimes of Canada, within reach of the sea. Kayaking and canoeing, hiking and gardening, listening to music and reading are all sources of great pleasure. But best of all are good friends, some going back to high-school days, and her family. In Newfoundland, she has a beautiful daughter-in-law and the two most delightful, handsome, and intelligent grandchildren in the world (of course!).
After receiving her Bachelor of Science with honours from Dalhousie University, she married. She worked at the Fisheries Research Board until her daughter was born. Following the birth of her son, she was employed by the pathology laboratory of Sydney City Hospital and the biology department of Mount Allison University. More recently, she completed a Masters in Theological Studies at the Atlantic School of Theology; her thesis juxtaposed Hebrew concepts of chaos in the book of Job with modern chaos theory.
When her husband joined the Armed Forces as a chaplain, she had to stop working. They moved three times in the first 18 months, the last move was to Prince Edward Island. By then her children were in school; she couldn't get a job; and at the local bridge club, she kept forgetting not to trump her partner's ace.
However, she had always loved to read, fascinated by the lure of being drawn into the other world of the story. So one day she bought a dozen Harlequin novels, read and analyzed them, then sat down and wrote one. Her first book, To Trust My Love, typed with four fingers, was published in 1974 as Sandra Field (she believes she's curiously the first Canadian to write for Harlequin). During the four years she lived in Prince Edward Island, she researched an 18th century French settlement located near present-day Brudenell, resulting in a historical book, Jean Pierre Roma, published in 1977 under her real name. She also started to write in collaboration with other Martimer writer under the pseudonym Jan MacLean. She also used to singed her novels the pseudonym of Jocelyn Haley. Her pseudonyms was an attempt to prevent the congregation from finding out what the chaplain's wife was up to in her spare time.
Before she turned 40, her life was changed, she had lost three of the most important women in her life: her mother and sister to illness, and her seventeen-year-old daughter to a car accident, and she separated from her husband in 1976. One of the lasting legacies of the grief caused by these losses has been the idea that it is impossible and undesirable to live every waking moment in the knowledge that loss can strike at any time.
She's been very fortunate for years to be able to combine a love of travel (particularly to the north - she doesn't do heat well) with her writing, by describing settings that most people will probably never visit. And there's always the challenge of making the heroine's long underwear sound romantic. Her novels has been translated into Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, Italian, Greek, Dutch, Swedish, Yugoslavian, Japanese... and sold in more than 90 countries. Her first collection of poetry, The Brevity of Red, was published in 2003. When her nine-years-old grandson, Stuart, asked him a book for him, she wrote her first Children's book and decided continued writing this type of books.
Jill now lives in Bedford, Nova Scotia, and she's lived most of her life in the Maritimes of Canada, within reach of the sea. Kayaking and canoeing, hiking and gardening, listening to music and reading are all sources of great pleasure. But best of all are good friends, some going back to high-school days, and her family. In Newfoundland, she has a beautiful daughter-in-law and the two most delightful, handsome, and intelligent grandchildren in the world (of course!).
Books by Jill MacLean
Oscuros pasados; Lágrimas de desamor
Hidden Agenda of Sigrid Sugden
His Defiant Mistress
Nix Minus One
Mistress Deal
Mistress Deal
Right Bride?
Right Bride?
Surrender to Marriage
The Present Tense Of Prinny Murphy
Jet-Set Summer Affairs
Seducciòn en Venecia
Seducciòn en Venecia
To Claim His Secret Son
Deseo ardiente
Nine Lives of Travis Keating
Nine Lives of Travis Keating
The Billionaire's Virgin Mistress
The Nine Lives of Travis Keating
Week in Bahamas
Week in Bahamas
Married to a Millionaire
Married to a Millionaire
Pregnant Proposals
Pregnant Proposals
Pris Au Piege De La Passion
The Millionaire's Pregnant Wife
Tycoon's Virgin
Tycoon's Virgin
His Virgin Lover
His Virgin Lover
Jet-Set Seduction
Jet-Set Seduction
Millionaire's Pregnant Wife
Millionaire's Pregnant Wife
The Jet-Set Seduction
Un Bouleversant Souvenir
Un Bouleversant Souvenir
Ahavah u-teshuḳah
Ahavah u-teshuḳah
English Aristocrat's Bride
English Aristocrat's Bride
His One-Night Mistress
The English Aristocrat's Bride
Trece Anos Despues
Hot Summer Loving
Jean Pierre Roma of the Company of the East of Isle St. Jean
Pregnant Brides
The millionaire's marriage demand
The Tycoon's Virgin Bride
Troublante Attirance
Troublante Attirance
Tycoon's Virgin Bride
Tycoon's Virgin Bride
Brevity of Red, The
Cumbres De Pasion Heights Of Passion
Millionaire's Marriage Demand
Millionaire's Marriage Demand
On the Tycoon's Terms
Oscuros Pasados
Pregnancy of Convenience
The brevity of red
The brevity of red
Exotic Heat
Meʾahevet zemanit
Meʾahevet zemanit
Una Semana De Amor (One Week Of Love)
Expecting His Baby
The Mistress Deal
Contract Bridegroom
Pour une nuit ou pour la vie
Jared's Love-Child
Reve d'un Solitaire
Reve d'un Solitaire
Seducing Nell
Aveu Difficile
Girl Trouble (Man Talk) (Presents , No 1964)
Remarried in Haste
Blind to Love
Bodyguards
Second Honeymoon (Significant
Second Honeymoon (Significant Others)
Souvenirs et mensonges
Un jeu sans conséquences
The Sandra Field collection
The Sandra Field collection
The Land of Maybe
Goodbye forever
La Sonate du bonheur
La Sonate du bonheur
Trite kaı tychere
Trite kaı tychere
Riche de toi (Harlequin)
Riche de toi (Harlequin)
Un Bouquet d'iris sauvages
Un Bouquet d'iris sauvages
ניגודי האהבה
ניגודי האהבה
An Attraction of Opposites
Jamais Plus De Secrets
La Nymphe de Sioux Lake
Romance D'Automne
Serenade for a Lost Love
Single Combat
The Storms of Spring
The Tides of Summer
Sight of a stranger
Love Wild and Free
The Winds of Winter
To Trust My Love
To Trust My Love