“History is a process, not a locked box with a collection of facts inside. The past and present are always in dialogue.”

~~ Hilary Mantel

Nancy Horan is the author of three novels. Loving Frank (2007) chronicles a little-known chapter in the life of legendary American architect Frank Lloyd Wright, and his client, Mamah Borthwick Cheney. Loving Frank remained on the New York Times Bestseller list for over a year. It has been translated into sixteen languages and received the 2009 Prize for Historical Fiction awarded by the Society of American Historians.

Under the Wide and Starry Sky (2014) explores the unlikely relationship of Robert Louis Stevenson and his spirited American wife, Fanny Van de Grift Stevenson. Horan aims to understand the past by interpreting and portraying the impact of real events on the lives of real people. Stevenson has been credited with a wise observation: “Everybody, soon or late, sits down to a banquet of consequences.” The author is interested in how her characters arrive at the banquet, and how they deal with the results of their choices.

The House Of Lincoln (2023) chronicles the intersecting lives of three families in Springfield, Illinois beginning in the 1850s. A Portuguese house girl for the Lincoln family narrates the struggle of her immigrant family and her experiences inside the home of the her employer; a minister and barber to Lincoln reveals the Underground Railroad activities of his free Black family; and Mary Todd Lincoln’s point of view reveals her joys and profound losses over the course of her life. Culminating in the 1908 Springfield Race Riot, The House of Lincoln documents the Civil War and its aftermath in Abraham Lincoln’s chosen hometown. The House of Lincoln is the result of the author’s journey to portray a history beneath the more familiar history of Abraham Lincoln.

A native Midwesterner, Nancy Horan was a Chicago journalist before turning to fiction writing. She now lives with her husband on an island in Puget Sound.