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Photography by Lynda Louis Photography

About Tati Richardson

Tati Richardson is a fiction writer, podcaster, and (sometimes) blogger from the eastside of Atlanta, Georgia. As a kid, Tati’s mother instilled in her a love of books and she started reading full sentences by the age of 3. It was a trip to the library at age 14 with her mother that she discovered the world of romance in copies of historical romances by Beverly Jenkins.

After graduating Magna cum Laude from Clark Atlanta University with a B.A. in English, Tati received her Master of Arts in English (Editing and Publishing) from the University of North Carolina-Greensboro in 2003.

Although she has spent the last 20 years working in higher education administration, Tati's real passion has always been writing. She started  a successful and popular blog in 2008 (SexandtheSouthernBelle.com), chronicling her adventures as a single, black woman dating in Atlanta. In 2018, Tati decided to pursue the craft professionally, writing inclusive contemporary and romantic comedies centering Blackness, queer-identity, and body-positivity. In December of 2019, Tati started the podcast, Romance in Colour with her friend of nearly twenty years, Dr. Yakini Etheridge.  Initially a place to talk all things Hallmark and holiday movies, Romance in Colour has evolved into a podcast dedicated to the discussion the intersection of race and romance in movies, television, books, and all facets of pop culture.

Tati lives in a suburb of Atlanta, Georgia with her husband and their school-age daughter. When she isn't writing, Tati enjoys watching rom-coms, tattoos, 90s R&B, Southern Rap, crafting fails from Pinterest, sweet tea, Marvel Comics, Wonder Woman, and collecting “the perfect shade of red” lipsticks. (She’s up to 22 so far!)

Tati’s debut novel. The Build Up (Carina, 2023) was an Amazon Best Book of 2023 and a starred Booklist Top Romance of 2023.

An Apple Books Writer to Watch, Tati is represented by Keisha Mennefee of Honey Magnolia Media

Memberships:

Inclusive Romance Project- 2021 Mentoring Cohort

Wordmakers

“No black woman writer in this culture can write “too much.” Indeed, no woman writer can write ‘too much’…No woman has ever written enough.”

— bell hooks