Barbara Goldstein

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Barbara Goldstein (born February 27, 1966 in Neumünster ; † March 23, 2014 in Gröbenzell ) was a German author of non-fiction , novels and historical novels .

Life

After graduating from high school in 1985 and training at an academy in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe , Barbara Goldstein worked for several years in Frankfurt am Main as the secretary of the management of German and Scottish companies as well as a Japanese bank, before becoming assistant to the spokesman for the board of a newly founded German direct bank went to Munich , took up a distance learning course in philosophy and social behavioral sciences in addition to her professional activity and wrote her first non-fiction book about Jesus of Nazareth : Jeschua ben Joseph .

A few months later she moved to the human resources department of the Advance Bank , where she was responsible as a manager for recruiting and supporting employees and, as a project manager, accompanied company mergers and relocations, developed compensation models and carried out a study on the opening of branches throughout Europe. The second technical book on call center management was also produced during this time .

Her first historical novel Die Baumeisterin was written in 2001 and published in 2005 by Weltbild . In 2012 the author published the novel again under the title The Lady of the Pyramids .

From 2003 Barbara Goldstein worked near Munich as a freelance writer of historical novels, all of which have been published by the Lübbe publishing group and have been translated into several languages. Her novels The Forgotten Pope (2009), The Shrine of God (2010) and The Ring of Solomon (2010) deal with Pope Eugene IV and the Catholic-Orthodox Church Union of Florence in 1439 and its aftermath.

After 2010, Barbara Goldstein also wrote landscape / longing novels about the beginning of the 20th century on the American continent under a first pseudonym . The books were published by the Lübbe publishing group.

In 2013 she published more novels under her second pseudonym Lara Myles. With this new market presence, Barbara Goldstein established herself as Lara Myles in the market of modern contemporary literature .

Works as Barbara Goldstein

Works as Lara Myles

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Announcement from the publisher , accessed on November 4, 2014
  2. Barbara Goldstein. In: Kürschner's German Literature Calendar 2014/2015: Volume I: AO. Volume II: PZ. , Walter De Gruyter Incorporated, 2014, p. 320, ISBN 978-3-11-033720-4 .