~ BIO ~
GINNA GRAY
A
native Texan, Ginna Gray lived in Houston all her life until 1993,
when
she and her husband Brad built their 'dream home' and moved
to
the mountains of Colorado. Coming from a large, Irish/American family,
in which spinning colorful yarns was commonplace, made writing
a natural
career choice for Ginna. "I grew up hearing so many fascinating tales,
I was eleven or twelve before I realized that not everyone made
up
stories," Ginna says.
Throughout her school years, whenever Ginna turned in essay papers
her teachers would say, "Ginna, you should be a writer," and she would
always reply, "That's what I'm going to be." However, Ginna explains,
life has a way of getting in the way.
She married young, had a daughter and divorced. As a single mom and
the sole bread-winner, raising a child alone became her top priority.
Ginna also managed to attend college part-time in the evenings, which
left precious little time to pursue her dream of becoming a writer.
However, during those years she continued to keep a journal and occasionally
write short stories for her own gratification.
Then, after seven years of being single, Ginna met her soul mate.
Following a lovely, year long courtship, she and Brad married. They
had planned to start a family immediately, but thing don't always
work out as you plan. Almost nine years later, long after they had
given up any hope of having more children, Ginna gave birth to another
daughter. "Whenever people express surprise over the seventeen year
age gap between our daughters, my husband always tells them that we
planned it that way," Ginna explains with a chuckle. "He then adds
that the only way you can afford to educate kids these days is to
spread them out."
With the birth of her second child, Ginna quit working and stayed
home to be a full time Mom, a luxury (and joy) that she did not have
when her older daughter was an infant. For the next five years, Ginna
continued to write for her own pleasure, but she did not submit anything.
"I just didn't have the nerve," she says. "I thought you had to be
a Hemingway or a Fitzgerald or someone of that ilk, otherwise editors
would laugh at you."
Finally, however, after putting her youngest child on the bus for
her first day of kindergarten, for the first time in her life she
had no job to rush off to, no classes to take, and the house all to
herself. "I realized that it was now or never. I marched home from
that school bus stop and plopped myself down in front of my fifteen
year old typewriter and started my first novel. (At that point, I
hadn't even heard of a personal computer. Since then, I've gone through
five of them.)"
There followed three years of rejections. "And rightly so," Ginna
says. "The first novel I wrote was awful. The next one was better,
and the one after that, better still, but not quite good enough. I
knew that because the rejection letters were getting more encouraging
and much more personal. I still have those first three efforts in
a drawer, and every now and then I take them out and skim a few pages
and laugh. Still, I consider those first attempts a valuable learning
experience."
Ginna sold her first novel in 1983, after winning the Golden Heart
Award, given by Romance Writers of America for the best unpublished
novel in a category. She has been working as a full-time writer ever
since. When she finishes her current contracts, Ginna will have written
thirty-three books. She has also given many lectures and writing workshops
and judged in writing contests.
Now that both of her daughters are grown and have 'flown the nest'
Ginna also enjoys other creative activities, such as oil painting,
sewing, sketching, knitting and needlepoint. "But my first love will
always be writing. It is simply part of who I am."







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