She is a writer, known for Every Secret Thing (2014), The Wire (2002) and The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson (2005). Times are changing, and so is Maddie. It’s a good day to be Baltimore crime novelist Laura Lippman. A leopard-print coat with giant red sunglasses. Pauline a.k.a. Theirs are the murders investigated by Madeline “Maddie” Schwartz in Laura Lippman’s haunting new novel. Laura Lippman was born on January 31, 1959 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. (It doesn’t hurt that she’s more or less been the same dress size for 25 years.) Laura Lippman is a New York Times bestselling novelist who has won more than twenty awards for her fiction, including the Edgar Award—and been nominated for thirty more. What makes this book special, even extraordinary, is … I’ve been enjoying them,” Lippman says. Since her debut in 1997, she has published twenty-one novels, a novella, a children’s book, and a collection of short stories. She is married to David Simon.They have one child. "Polly" has rolled into Delaware with her husband and daughter. Laura Lippman, the bestselling crime novelist (most recently of "Lady in the Lake") opens up about her comfort re-reading (including obscure midcentury YA), movie-star Venn diagrams (involving "Shattered Glass" and "Quiz Show") and her new Twitter selfie routine. Adam rolls into Delaware with secrets of his own that surround Polly. It’s the mid 1960s. Sunburn by Laura Lippman is a roller coaster from the start. Laura Lippman, whose novels have won numerous crime-fiction prizes, ... Polly had sued the hospital where her first daughter was born and won a settlement that should net her $2 million. “There are these really nice memories in my closet. These two meet, not by chance of course, and from there the ride begins. Download premium images you can't get anywhere else. Find high-quality Laura Lippman stock photos and editorial news pictures from Getty Images. An outfit—pink pants and a black top—styled by Georgia Ray, Lippman's daughter with writer/producer David Simon. (Laura Lippman) The Times asked authors to track what they do in isolation.