Copeland's Cure is Natalie Robins's ninth book, four of which are volumes of poetry published by the legendary Alan Swallow Press. Her first nonfiction book, Savage Grace, won an Edgar Award for the best fact-based crime book published in 1985. Alien Ink: The FBIs War on Freedom of Expression was the winner of the 1992 Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award, as well as being named a New York Times "Notable Book of 1992." Sherwin B.Nuland, MD called The Girl Who Died Twice: The Libby Zion Case and the Hidden Hazards of Hospitals, published in 1995, a book that "will bring new reportorial and literary standards to its genre." Robins, also the author of Living in the Lightning , which won the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's 1999 Chairman's Citation Award, lives in Riverdale, the Bronx, New York, with her husband, the writer Christopher Lehmann-Haupt. They have two grown children.
Natalie Robins is available for lectures and panel discussions, you may contact her via email.