Carolyn Hart

Hart_Carolyn2011How the classic Beverly Gray novels of Clair Blank changed my life

 

I look back over a lifetime of reading and remember books from many wonderful writers. I learned from them all, suspense from Alexandre Dumas, courage from Louisa May Alcott, protest from Charles Dickens, the imaginable unimaginable from William Faulkner, anguish from Edna St. Vincent Millay, clear-eyed judgment from Agatha Christie. But if I peel back the years and tell the truth, the books that directed the course of my life were simply-written books for girls, the Beverly Gray novels by Clair Blank. The books chart her college years and her success as a reporter and writer. These books first suggested to me that one could have a life as a writer and as a reporter. I grew up determined to be a reporter. I worked on school newspapers, majored in journalism, worked briefly as a reporter, then turned to fiction in my late twenties. Thank you, Beverly Gray. 

blank_beverlygrayreporterCarolyn Hart's latest from her Death on Demand series is Laughed 'Til He Died (William Morrow, April 2010).

This "Writers on Reading" essay was originally published in "At the Scene" eNews March-April 2010 as a first-look exclusive to our enewsletter subscribers. For more special content available first to our enewsletter subscribers, sign up here.

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