A British writer born in Zimbabwe, and her father was a journalist and professor of economics. She then moved to London in 1989. She was seventeen years old at the time, after which she joined Keble College, University of Oxford, where she studied philosophy, politics, and...Read more economics, and then worked as a journalist for The Times newspaper. She used to write reports on business, then worked with a number of publishing houses, and after that, she wrote a book containing financial advice for women. By 2019, she began writing a number of romantic fiction stories under the pseudonym "Amy Silver" and then wrote four novels, but they did not achieve the expected success, despite the novel, Confessions of a Reluctant Recessionista, achieving good results. She returned in January 2015 with the novel The Girl on the Train, which topped the book sales lists for several weeks before being transformed into a movie. It was also translated to Arabic in 2015.
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A British writer born in Zimbabwe, and her father was a journalist and professor of economics. She then moved to London in 1989. She was seventeen years old at the time, after...Read more which she joined Keble College, University of Oxford, where she studied philosophy, politics, and economics, and then worked as a journalist for The Times newspaper. She used to write reports on business, then worked with a number of publishing houses, and after that, she wrote a book containing financial advice for women. By 2019, she began writing a number of romantic fiction stories under the pseudonym "Amy Silver" and then wrote four novels, but they did not achieve the expected success, despite the novel, Confessions of a Reluctant Recessionista, achieving good results. She returned in January 2015 with the novel The Girl on the Train, which topped the book sales lists for several weeks before being transformed into a movie. It was also translated to Arabic in 2015.