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Dear
Reader,
If you’d like to know a little about me, read on.
I attended New England public schools. We diagrammed sentences.
We were drilled in spelling and grammar. This brutal process proved
useful in later life. It turned out that everything they taught
me in school--including the evil word problems in math--was useful
in later life. Too bad I forgot most of it.
My career at Clark University was not short. After earning a B.A.
in only twice the usual time, I stayed on to work in clerical, administrative,
and part-time teaching posts. There were other real jobs along the
way: stints with jewelry and clothing retailers, and a Dickensian
six-month experience as a meter maid.
But my main business in life was writing. This is why I majored
in English instead of something useful that would lead to job with
an actual salary. English majors must read mountains of books and
write reams of papers. If only they would have paid me for being
an English major, my life would have been perfect.
Meanwhile, whether or not anyone wanted me to, I wrote plays, poetry,
letters, and, of course, the Great American Novel. The latter went
on forever and--happily--remains unfinished to this day.
But no one ever paid me for writing until after college graduation,
when I started moonlighting as a corporate video scriptwriter. This
led to the fateful meeting with a video producer who lured me into
writing novels and eventually became Mr. Chase.
The books resulting from this union
have won a surprising number of awards, including the Romance Writers
of America Rita.
It is almost as grand a job as being an English major.
Yours sincerely,
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