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About MeI majored in English at The College of Saint Rose, in Albany, and after two internships in advertising and public relations, decided to enter the communications field, which is a place where writers can write and make a living too. I got married three months after graduation (my husband Tony and I will be celebrating our 25th wedding anniversary next August ), and we moved to Connecticut. I worked at a large advertising/pr firm during the day and got my master's in English at Trinity College nights. When we moved back to the Albany, New York area a few years later, I took a job as a publicist for Russell Sage College in Troy and soon became Director of Communications for the Sage Colleges. Our son, Christopher, was born in 1989. Two years later I took out a small-business loan, left my "safe job" and founded Books Worth Writing, to develop and publish The Remembering Book, an heirloom-quality tribute to a loved one's life (created after losing my best friend to cancer and wanting to be sure the story of her life was remembered and celebrated). This book-product is now in its 3rd printing, 10,000 copies sold. Around that same time, I began teaching as an adjunct instructor in the English Department at Russell Sage, doing freelance public relations assignments for business and nonprofit clients, and leading public-speaking workshops for women. Our son, Connor, was born in 1992 and then our third son, Dylan, in 1994. After Dylan was born, I hopped off the career train
for a few years to chase after three boys under the age of 5. I wrote a
song for each of my sons and sang their special songs to them as bedtime
lullabies. I kept a journal (I have on and off since college), wrote
poems, and "roasts" for friends' birthdays, planted a perennial garden,
a vegetable garden, read tons of books, started a book club, cleared a
walking trail in the woods behind our house…and with my three young sons
in tow, I returned to my "library days." Breaking into this business was the hardest and
longest race I've ever run. I wrote stories for four years before I felt
the work was ready. And then, once my writing was of publishable
quality, it took two years of submitting before I got a contract. 179
rejections later. You've got to want it badly. You've got to read, read,
read, and write, write, write and revise, revise, revise, and listen to
people who are wiser than you, and learn from your rejections, and take
comments from editors very seriously, and be willing to catch the
fireflies of inspiration before they fly off forgotten, and, most of
all, you've got to BELIEVE in yourself. Believe, believe, believe. |
My Favorite Childhood Books: |
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