ReShonda Tate

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(Redirected from ReShonda Tate Billingsley)
ReShonda Tate
Pen nameReShonda Tate Billingsley
OccupationAuthor and journalist
Genre
  • Adult fiction
  • teen fiction
  • contemporary
  • Christian fiction
  • romance
Notable works
  • Let the Church Say Amen
  • The Secret She Kept
Website
reshondatate.com

ReShonda Tate is an American author and journalist. Tate is also known as "ReShonda Tate Billingsley."

Career[edit]

Tate has authored over 50 books, and has contributed to several anthologies.[1] Currently, she writes historical fiction. She previously wrote both adult and teen fiction under the name ReShonda Tate Billingsley, as well as nonfiction. Three of her novels have been nominated for the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Fiction.[1] Several of her books were made into movies; Let the Church Say Amen and The Secret She Kept. The film adaptation of her sophomore novel Let the Church Say Amen, directed by Regina King and produced by TD Jakes and Queen Latifah, originally aired on BET.[2] Her novel The Secret She Kept was made into a film that aired on TVOne.

Tate is also a screenwriter, with credits including "Christmas with my Ex," which aired on TV One.

In 2014, Tate co-founded a publishing company, Brown Girls Books, with author Victoria Christopher Murray.[3] She has also appeared in the stage play Marriage Material by Je'Caryous Johnson.[4]

Tate previously worked for NBC affiliate KFOR[5] in Oklahoma City and Fox affiliate KRIV in Houston, Texas as a television reporter/anchor.

Books[edit]

  • My Brother's Keeper (2003) ISBN 978-0743477130
  • Four Degrees of Heat (anthology) (2004) Excerpt: "Rebound" ISBN 978-0743491457
  • Let the Church Say Amen (2004) ISBN 978-1476708874
  • Help! I've Turned Into My Mother (2005) ISBN 978-1593090500
  • I Know I've Been Changed (2006) ISBN 978-1416511984
  • Have A Little Faith (anthology) (2006) Excerpt: "Faith Will Overcome" ISBN 978-1416516767
  • Nothing But Drama (2006) ISBN 978-1416525608
  • Everybody Say Amen (2007) ISBN 978-1416521655
  • With Friends Like These (2007) ISBN 978-1416525622
  • Blessing in Disguise (2007) ISBN 978-1416525615
  • The Pastor's Wife (2007) ISBN 978-1416521662
  • Getting Even (2008) ISBN 978-1416558736
  • Fair-Weather Friends (2008) ISBN 978-1416558767
  • Can I Get a Witness? (2008) ISBN 978-1416521679
  • The Devil is a Lie (2009) ISBN 978-1416578048
  • Friends 'Til the End (2009) ISBN 978-1416558774
  • Caught up in the Drama (2010) ISBN 978-1439156865
  • Holy Rollers (2010) ISBN 978-1416578055
  • Drama Queens (2010) ISBN 978-1439156872
  • Body of Innocence (2011) ISBN 978-0615577449
  • A Good Man is Hard to Find (2011) ISBN 978-1439183502
  • Lady Jasmine / Sins of the Mother / Let the Church Say Amen / Everybody Say Amen (2011) ISBN 978-1451651096
  • Say Amen, Again (2011) ISBN 978-1416578062
  • Sinners & Saints (2012) ISBN 978-1451608151
  • Something to Say: poetry to motivate the mind, body and soul (2012) ASIN B006WX2OMQ
  • The Secret She Kept (July 2012) ISBN 978-1451639650
  • Finding Amos (2012) ISBN 978-1451617047
  • Real As It Gets (2012) ISBN 978-0758289551
  • You Don't Know Me Like That (2013) ISBN 978-0758289537
  • Rumor Central (2013) ISBN 978-0758289513
  • Friends & Foes (2013) ISBN 978-1451608168
  • The Motherhood Diaries (2013) ISBN 978-1476711454
  • A Family Affair (2013) ISBN 978-1451639711
  • Fortune & Fame (2014) ISBN 978-1476747170
  • Truth or Dare (2014) ISBN 978-0758289575
  • Boy Trouble (2014) ISBN 978-0758289599
  • The Motherhood Diaries 2 (2014) ISBN 978-1625174529
  • What's Done in the Dark (2014) ISBN 978-1476714929
  • A Blessing & A Curse (2015) ISBN 978-1476748887
  • Eye Candy (2015) ISBN 978-0758289612
  • Pay Day (2015) ISBN 978-1625178329
  • Mama's Boy (2015) ISBN 978-1476714950
  • The Perfect Mistress (2016) ISBN 978-1476715049
  • It Should've Been Me (2016) ISBN 978-1944359515
  • Seeking Sarah (2017) ISBN 978-1501156625
  • The Book in Room 316 (2018) ISBN 978-1501156663
  • If Only For One Night (2018) ISBN 978-1944359720
  • The Stolen Daughter (2019) ISBN 978-1496724144
  • More to Life (2019) ISBN 978-1496724120
  • A Little Bit of Karma (2020) ISBN 978-1439183588
  • Miss Pearly's Girls: A Captivating Tale of Family Healing (2022) ISBN 978-1496735393
  • The Queen of Sugar Hill: A Novel of Hattie McDaniel (2024) ISBN 978-0063291072

Awards[edit]

  • Texas Literary Hall of Fame (2022)
  • Smithsonian's African American History Makers (2016)
  • African American Literary Award for Best Christian Fiction for Fortune & Fame (2014) with Victoria Christopher Murray
  • NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literature 2012[6]
  • African American Literary Award for Best Teen Fiction for Drama Queens (2011)
  • Inductee into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame (2010)[7]
  • Rolling Out Magazine′s Top 25 Women of Houston (2009)[8]
  • Five-time winner of the National Association of Black Journalists "Spirit in the Words"
  • Let the Church Say Amen named one of Library Journal's Best Books 2004 in Christian Fiction[9]
  • #1 Essence best-selling author
  • 2006 Texas Executive Woman on the Move[10]
  • Black Writers Alliance Gold Pen Award for best new author (2002)
  • Mama's Boy named one of Library Journal's Best Books 2015 in African American Fiction[11]

Personal[edit]

Tate was born in Kansas City, Missouri, to Bruce Tate and Nancy Kilgore. She moved to Arkansas at a young age and was raised in her mother’s hometown of Smackover, as well as in other towns in the state. She later moved to Houston, Texas, where she graduated from Madison High School. She earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin. She is married to Dr. Miron Billingsley and has three children.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Encyclopedia of Arkansas". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Retrieved 2024-02-05.
  2. ^ "Let the Church Say Amen (TV Movie 2013) - IMDb". IMDb.
  3. ^ Reid |, Calvin. "Authors Launch Brown Girls Publishing". PublishersWeekly.com. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  4. ^ "BlackNews.com - Je'Caryous Johnson's "Marriage Material" in Washington DC, November 16-21, 2010". www.blacknews.com. Archived from the original on 2015-11-14.
  5. ^ Bracht, Mel. "3 anchors expecting big news." The Daily Oklahoman 2 Apr. 2000, CITY, TV: 17. NewsBank. Web. 27 Dec. 2016.
  6. ^ "NAACP Image Awards 2012: Full list of winners | abc7.com". Archived from the original on 2014-10-22.
  7. ^ WILLIAMS, HELAINE. "Stars over Arkansas - VIP reception, induction adds six notable names to the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame." Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) 24 Oct. 2010, High Profile: 44. NewsBank. Web. 27 Dec. 2016.
  8. ^ "The Top 25 Women of Houston". 27 October 2009.
  9. ^ Hoffert, Barbara, et al. "Best books 2004." Library Journal 1 Jan. 2005: 54+. Popular Magazines. Web. 13 July 2016.
  10. ^ "Past Honorees | Texas Executive Women". texasexecutivewomen.org. Archived from the original on 2013-05-19.
  11. ^ DiGirolomo, Kate, et al. "Best books 2015." Library Journal 1 Dec. 2015: 30+. Popular Magazines. Web. 13 July 2016.

External links[edit]