Her childhood experiences in Atlantic City, N.J.
have played a large role in much of her writing. The landscape and
tenor of the deteriorating resort in the 1950s and 1960s, before
gambling was legalized, form the backdrop for her first novel, Bobby's
Girl, as well as the poems in Sea Air in a Grave Ground
Hog Turns Toward. The sea and beach have served as inspiration
for other poetry books,
including Pirates Song, and Combing the Waves.
Increasingly throughout the 1970s, she experimented
with serial forms in poetry, finding it more and more difficult
to see individual poems as units complete in themselves. Finally
it became evident that only the larger format provided by an extended
prose narrative could embody all the issues she hoped her writing
would explore.
Her play, Kité Fami: My family has
left me, based on the Salem witch trials, was produced at The
Studio For Creative Movement in New York City, March 1976, directed
by Merle Lister. "Tellings," a dramatic monologue based
on poems written about her mothers life, was performed at
Theatre St. Clements in 1979.
During 1989-1990 she served as ghostwriter for
three psychiatry books published by The PIA Press, on Manic Depression,
Borderline Personality Disorder, and Co-Dependency. Working on these
books, concerned with the problems which survivors of psychological
and/or sexual abuse face when they enter into adult love relationships,
offered new insights into the characters available to her fiction.
Her second novel, The
Lion's Share, is the story of a woman who, having been sexually
molested as a ten-year-old, becomes involved in her first healthy
relationship with a man at the age of thirty-four. Novels currently
in progress examine other aspects of problematic personalities.
And, in terms of what some would consider "problematic"
personalities, a large thrust of her work over the past decade has
been researching and editing the anthology Bearing
Life: Womens Writing on Childlessness.
Over the years her ouvre has expanded to include short
stories, memoirs, articles, criticism, and editing, while poetry remains
a firm, and continual, base.
Additional biographical information can be found
in Marquis Whos Who in America, a forthcoming edition
of Marquis Whos Who of American Women, Gale Researchs
Contemporary Authors and various volumes published by the
International Biographical Center, as well as in PreviewPorts
International Writers Index.
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