I was born in Piraeus. I spent my childhood and adolescence in Athens and Salonica, two cities I came to adore. I grew up in the theatre and by that impetus I decided to become an actress. I studied at the National Theatre Drama School. For a time, I worked on stage, television and cinema. When I realized acting wasn't exactly what I wanted, I tried to expand my horizons. I studied at the Faculty of Theatre Studies of the University of Athens. I pursued postgraduate studies in London. I lived there for three years. I was awarded a doctorate. The day I completed it, I knew that there was no chance I would ever embark on an academic career; that, ultimately, the only reason I spent endless hours researching, writing and deleting, was to learn how to handle a story, set it up and narrate it. That is how I started writing, and that is how I finished my first novel, Margarita and the Sunflowers. I hope other novels will follow. I live in Athens and I have a daughter.
Margarita and the Sunflowers is a detective comedy, circling around Margarita Trianti, a young painter prone to outrageous and unexpected situations. She crosses Europe to find refuge in Trisvatha, her hometown in the mountains of Corinth, trying to escape her pursuers, London's Russian mob. There, however, her problems catch up with her in the form of the gigantic Dimitri, sent by arch-mobster Sergei. And as Margarita believes the game is over and prepares to give in, Dimitri is found dead.
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