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I was born in the 1950s in a small town in Iowa, and grew up
there living a 'Beaver Cleaver existence' (as described by
one friend). Riding bikes to the swimming pool, fishing in
farm ponds, popcorn on the courthouse lawn while listening
to the local band playing, square dancing in the
intersection outside the library. A typical, Midwestern
existence.
College beckoned in the 1970s, and continued to beckon for
many years. I earned five college degrees (B.A., M.A., B.S.,
M.S., A.A.S.), usually while working at a University (and
they paid the tuition -- such a deal!) My fields of study
were varied: Information Theory, English Literature, and
Horticulture. I was able to parlay
the education into job interviews, which landed me my first
technical writing job, documenting purchase order software
for a small company in Pittsburgh. That led to jobs
documenting medical systems, then more complex jobs
documenting file systems on UNIX platforms.
Then I moved to the Midwest, mainly to be closer to my
family in Iowa. I got a job at a local supercomputer company
(you figure it out, how many supercomputer companies got
their start in the Midwest?), and started documenting the underlying file
system structure. That led to a job with another software
company, where I currently work (quite happily).
In 2003 I read my first romance novel and was startled that
this genre existed. It was something I'd never encountered,
even with degrees in British and American fiction. I
immediately decided this was the genre for me.
But there was a problem: the books I read all featured young
heroines, interested in starting a family and having babies
(it seems like babies just about always figured into it
someplace). This was not a group of people I could
relate to. They were very spunky, and courageous, and all
that jazz but the whole baby thing -- nope.
So I started writing about older women, with some age on
'em, who are interested in men, and sex, and having a good
relationship (which may or may not include a marriage). I'm
also very interested in writing about men who've spent time
in Viet Nam, during the war. That's an untapped wound in
America's psyche that I don't think has been explored nearly
enough. I know so many people who were affected by the war
-- I know I was affected by it, very deeply. How are those
men faring today, as they face retirement and the other
stresses that all Baby Boomers are facing? Now those
are people I want to read about and write about.
That's when I started writing romantic suspense, with an occasional
side-track into my first love, Sci-Fi/alternate America. I
have a long-running, never ending saga about a post-apocalyptic America
that I keep returning to, working on it when I get
frustrated with our current society, laws, and politics. It's so much
fun to create a world where I can kill off a large amount of
the population and restructure the remaining society into
what I think will work. It's very cathartic.
Thirteen of my books have found a home
so far, with contracts for five or six more and interest in
six others (yes, I'm prolific). Speaking of home, mine is in Minnesota, outside the Twin
Cities. The bleak winters suit me just fine, as do the
summers at the lake. I'm married to a very talented glass
artist who spends a lot of time in the studio, making
amazingly beautiful things. We have assorted animals who live
with us, and who make regular appearances in my books under
various pseudonyms (they know who they are).
I'm active on several
Romance Writer's of
America (RWA) sponsored Yahoo groups, as well as the loop
for my local Romance Writers of America chapter,
Midwest
Fiction Writers (MFW). For a complete list of where to
find me, go here.
Am I busy? Yep.
Do I enjoy it? You betcha.

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