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Born:
February
11, 1939
- New
York
City,
New York.
United
States
of
America.
It seems
like
I've
been
writing
since
birth! I
started
writing
poems
before I
got to
school.
I wrote
the
class
musical
in first
grade —
both
words
and
music.
It was
about a
bunch of
vegetables
who got
together
in a
salad. I
played
the
chief
carrot!
While I
was in
junior
high, I
wrote an
entire
essay in
rhyme
about
manufacturing
in New
York
State.
In high
school,
I won a
Scholastic
poetry
contest.
In
college,
I wrote
newspaper
articles
and
songs.
Then, on
my 21st
birthday,
I sold
my first
book. It
was a
nonfiction
book
about
women
pirates—
Pirates
in
Petticoats.
After
that, I
was a
book
writer
for good.
I've
also
been an
editor,
a
teacher,
a
storyteller,
a critic,
a
songwriter
for rock
groups
and folk
singers—
as well
as a
mother
and now
a
grandmother.
I've
been
married
for 35
years to
Dr.
David
Stemple,
who is
the
chairman
of a
university
computer
science
department.
Despite
this, I
only
started
using a
computer
for
writing
a few
year
ago!
Before
then, I
wrote on
a
typewriter,
endlessly
revising.
My
friends
call it
gem
polishing.
But I
remember
something
the
great
poet
John
Ciardi
once
said—
that a
poem is
never
finished,
just
abandoned.
I am
that way
with
everything
I write.
I just
keep
going
over and
over and
over
until
someone
yanks it
out of
my hands!
I've
written
more
than 200
books. |