Hart, Joyce 1954-

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HART, Joyce 1954-

Personal

Born February 13, 1954, in Mansfield, OH; daughter of Anton (a pilot and military officer) and Josephine (a homemaker; maiden name, Fumea) Letang; married Paul Lewis (a high school principal; marriage ended); married Ronald A. Hart (a teacher and coach), 1978 (deceased); children: (first marriage) Rod, Brad; (second marriage) Renee. Ethnicity: "Caucasian." Education: University of Oregon, B.A.; University of Florida, M.A. Politics: Democrat.

Addresses

Home and offıce 1941 Parkview Dr., Bainbridge Island, WA 98110.


Career

Freelance photographer in Hawaii, 1984-88; Valencia Community College, Orlando, FL, adjunct professor, 1992-93; Beyond Essence (literary magazine), Eugene, OR, editor, 1993-94; Humphreys, Inc., office manager of Bill Adler Studio, 1994-99; freelance writer and copy editor, 1999. Volunteer teacher of English as a second language and adult literacy classes. Also worked as an assistant librarian, secretary, and substitute teacher.


Writings


Native Son: The Story of Richard Wright, Morgan Reynolds (Greensboro, NC), 2003.

Pennsylvania ("It's My State" series;), Benchmark Books (New York, NY), 2004.


Also author of textbooks.


Work in Progress

Two more entries, Oregon and Ohio, in the "It's My State" series for Benchmark Books (New York, NY), expected in 2005; a collection of short stories; a novel.


Sidelights

Joyce Hart told SATA: "My family traveled a lot while I was growing up, so I started writing at an early age in order to stay in touch with my friends, whom I always seemed to be leaving behind. At least once a week, I wrote long letters to them, hoping they would do the same. Letter writing developed into diary and journal writing, which I continue to this day. Because of these practices, putting my thoughts into words comes easily to me, even easier than actually speaking. (I have always been rather shy.)


"My college education was interrupted when I decided to get married, so I ended up graduating at the same time as one of my sons. However, I knew exactly what I wanted to study, because I had been thinking about it for a long time. I love language and wanted to know as much as I could about it. I majored in literature, but what I most wanted to learn was how languages were formed and used, so I also studied linguistics, foreign languages, and creative writing.


"After a long career in a variety of jobs, from working in a school library to managing a fashion design studio and editing a literary magazine, I decided to start my own business as a freelance writer and copy editor. I wanted to devote all my time to writing. It was a major decision for me, but it has proved to be my most satisfying job, and I wish I had been confident enough to have made this change a long time ago.

"Now I work for several different publishing companies. Sometimes I write books for them. Other times, I write material for Web sites and databases. Other writers often ask me to help them with their writing, and that is when my copy editing skills come in handy. My study of languages has made me very good at editing.


"Everything that I have published so far has been written for students, from elementary school through college. All of my books have been nonfiction and include a biography, a couple of textbooks for teaching English as a second language, and several with social studies topics. I enjoy writing nonfiction, but one day I also want to write fiction. My favorite form of fiction is the short story. And my favorite setting for these stories is Hawaii."



Biographical and Critical Sources

PERIODICALS


Booklist, February 15, 2003, Hazel Rochman, review of Native Son: The Story of Richard Wright, p. 1079.

School Library Journal, April, 2003, Andrew Medlar, review of Native Son, p. 182.

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