Laura Croghan Kamoie (born August 27, 1970) is an American historian and author. She writes historical fiction under her own name and romance under the name Laura Kaye.
Life and academic career
She was born Laura A. Croghan on August 27, 1970, in
Hagerstown, Maryland. A first-generation college student, she graduated cum laude from
Dickinson College in 1992.[1] At Dickinson, she met Brian Kamoie, later an official in the
Obama administration, and they married in 1996.[2]
Kamoie earned an MA and PhD in early American history from the
College of William and Mary. Kamoie wrote two works focusing on the economic activity of the slaveholding colonial
Tayloe family of Virginia. Neabsco and Occoquan: The Tayloe Family Iron Plantations, 1730-1830 (2003) won the
Prince William County Historical Commission Dissertation Award. Irons in the Fire: The Business History of the Tayloe Family and Virginia's Gentry, 1700-1860 (2007) was published by the
University of Virginia Press.[3]
Kamoie worked as a historical archaeologist for the
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, curated exhibits for the Cumberland County Historical Society in Carlisle, PA, served as senior editor of Washington History, the journal of the
Historical Society of Washington, D.C., and worked as project manager of the
Adams Morgan Heritage Trail, a project of
Cultural Tourism DC, where she wrote Roads to Diversity: The Adams Morgan Heritage Trail.[3][4]
In 2008, Kamoie suffered a "mild traumatic brain injury". While recovering, Kamoie felt a creative urge, taking guitar lessons, changing her taste in music, and writing a novel inspired by the Twilight series in 11 weeks.[5][6] She published her first novel, a romance called Hearts in Darkness, in 2011 with The Wild Rose Press under the pen name Laura Kaye.[7] Success came relatively quickly, and in 2012 she sold her "Hard Ink" series, featuring a group of ex-military conducting covert operations out of a tattoo parlor, to
Avon, subsidiary of HarperCollins, for six figures.[8] The next year she sold her first historical novel, co-authored with
Stephanie Dray, called America's First Daughter, about President
Thomas Jefferson's eldest daughter
Martha Jefferson Randolph, to
William Morrow, subsidiary of HarperCollins. At the end of 2013, she left teaching to write full time. Kamoie describes her work under the name Laura Kaye as "romantic suspense and contemporary and erotic romance."[9] In 2014, she sold her "Raven Riders" series, featuring a motorcycle club with special mission, again to Avon for six figures.[10]
In 2016, she published her first work of historical fiction under her own name, co-authored with
Stephanie Dray. America's First Daughter, about President
Thomas Jefferson's eldest daughter
Martha Jefferson Randolph, which became a New York Times bestseller, a Goodreads Readers' Choice Awards Finalist in Historical Fiction,[11] and an Audie Award Finalist.[12] In 2018, she co-authored a second novel with Stephanie Dray: My Dear Hamilton: A Novel of
Eliza Schuyler Hamilton, inspired in part by
Hamilton: An American Musical. In 2019, she was part of a six-author writing team who co-authored Ribbons of Scarlet: A Novel of the French Revolution's Women, which featured stories about historical figures including
Sophie de Condorcet, Louise Audu,
Elisabeth of France,
Manon Roland,
Charlotte Corday,
Pauline Leon, and Emilie de Sainte-Amaranthe Sartine. In 2020, she sold her first solo novel of historical fiction, Churchill's Spymistress, about
Special Operations Executive intelligence officer
Vera Atkins and her first two female spies to parachute into occupied France, to
Berkley, a subsidiary of
Penguin Random House, in a six-figure deal.[13] In 2021, she and co-author Stephanie Dray sold two novels to William Morrow in a seven-figure deal, including Founding Mother: The Story of
Abigail Adams.[14]
Neabsco and Occoquan: The Tayloe Family Iron Plantations, 1730-1830, Prince William Historical Commission (Prince William, VA), 2003.
Irons in the Fire: The Business History of the Tayloe Family and Virginia's Gentry, 1700-1860, University of Virginia Press (Charlottesville, VA), 2007.
(With Stephanie Dray) America's First Daughter (novel), William Morrow (New York, NY), 2016.
(With Stephanie Dray) My Dear Hamilton: A Novel of Eliza Schuyler Hamilton (novel), William Morrow (New York, NY), 2018.
(With Stephanie Dray,
Kate Quinn, Heather Webb,
Eliza Knight, and Sophie Perinot; with a foreword by
Allison Pataki) Ribbons of Scarlet: A Novel of the Women of the French Revolution (novel), William Morrow (New York, NY), 2019.