
For the next three years, she was a professor at Seattle University School of Law, teaching contracts and intellectual property. She took a year-long sabbatical to transition from practicing law to teaching. Milan was then hired to clerk for the Supreme Court of the United States, first for Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and then for Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy. At the time, there were no methods for clerks to report harassment and remain anonymous. Milan discussed the harassment and the discomfort it caused her with her friend author Eve Ortega, but chose not to report it. Milan later alleged that during her time in his employ, Kozinski called her into his office three times to look at porn, repeatedly asking her if the images aroused her. Career ĭuring 20, Milan clerked for judge Alex Kozinski of the U.S. She then went to the University of Michigan Law School, where she received the Henry Moore Bates scholarship. Milan attended the University of California, Berkeley, where she earned a master's degree in theoretical physical chemistry. She received a bachelor's degree with a double major in mathematics and chemistry from Florida State University in 2000. She wrote her first book at the age of ten and intended to be an author from a young age. According to her website, Milan was raised in Southern California. Milan was born in 1976, to American Doug Bond, a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Riverside, and a Chinese mother. The resulting controversy led to the mass resignation of half of the RWA board of directors, the resignation of the RWA executive director, and the cancellation of the 2020 RITA Award program. The board reinstated her days later, noting irregularities with the process. In late 2019, the RWA board voted to suspend Milan for calling another author's book racist. Milan served on the board of directors of the Romance Writers of America (RWA) for four years, spearheading efforts to make the organization more diverse and inclusive. Kozinski soon resigned his lifetime appointment, and Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts ordered a review of how the federal judiciary handled sexual harassment reports.

As the Me Too movement gained steam, Bond alleged that Kozinski had sexually harassed her. Prior to her writing career, Bond was a law clerk for Sandra Day O'Connor of the United States Supreme Court and for Judge Alex Kozinski.

After releasing her first few books under a traditional publishing contract, Milan has self-published more recent works.
