lenore hart             



  A Literary Biography: Lenore Hart





A fifth-generation Floridian of Irish, Welsh, and Cherokee heritage, Lenore Hart holds degrees from the University of Central Florida, Florida State University, and Old Dominion University.  Her work has been published in the US, Canada, and Norway.  She’s been a National Endowment for the Arts artist in residence, and writer in residence at various colleges.

Her fiction, poetry, essays, memoirs, and reviews have appeared  in The Apalachee Quarterly, Blackwater Review, Brutarian Magazine, Chesapeake Life, The Flagler Review, The Florida Times-Union, Kalliope, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, The Poet’s Domain, The Powhatan Review, QTR Literary Review, Real Simple, The State Street Review, THEMA, Tidewater Women, The Virginian-Pilot, Vision, The Writer, and Water’s Edge, and in Canada in subTerrain. Her fiction has been published in Norway by Fredhois Forlag Books and Egmont Böker. Her work has also been selected for Live Wire Press’s Virginia writers’ anthology In Good Company and the Friends of Women’s Studies’ anthology Turnings: Writings on Women’s Transformations.

Waterwoman (Putnam/Berkley, June 2002) was a 2002 Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Authors title. It was also a Bookspan selection, and an Alternate Selection of the Literary Guild.  Her children’s book T. Rex at Swan Lake, coauthored with Lisa Carrier, was released in May 2004, and her young adult historical novel, The Treasure of Savage Island, was published by Dutton in 2005.

Ordinary Springs (PenguinPutnam, January 2005) is set in Florida in the fifties and sixties.  Pubisher's Weekly calls the novel "Gritty, fierce . . . a fine vintage portrait of a tough girl whom life teaches to be tougher."  Booklist says, "Hart's gripping follow-up to her debut, Waterwoman (2002), is set in the small town of Ordinary Springs, Florida, in the 1950s. Dory Gamble's mother left when Dory was two, and her father--handsome, emotionally withdrawn Owen, who runs the local hardware store--raised her alone. No one comes between them until beautiful Myra Fitzgerald and her dying husband, Frank, move in next door when Dory is 15. Owen and Myra begin a passionate affair, enraging Dory and leading to her own sexual experimentation with her best friend, Pearce. When Dory wakes one night to find her father gone and the Fitzgeralds' door unlocked, she ventures into their house and sets off a chain of events that will change her life dramatically and take her away from her home in Ordinary Springs, though not in the way she has always imagined. As she did with Waterwoman, Hart tells such an alluring tale that the reader won't want to put the novel down. With accessible, inviting prose, Hart creates in Dory a character both fallible and completely sympathetic."

Her newest novel is Becky: The Life and Loves of Becky Thatcher, a Read-It-First.com selection. It was published by St. Martin's Press in 2008, with the trade paper edition appearing in 2009.  The story of Tom Sawyer continues, but now the characters are adults, and it's Becky Thatcher's turn to narrate the tale. The Civil War has come to Missouri. Life in Hannibal has grown more complicated. Becky's rejected Tom, her childhood sweetheart, and married his cousin Sid. But can she ever be free of a man as maddening, irresponsible, and charming as Tom Sawyer? 

(See the other pages in this site for more information on each of Hart's books.  Her next book, Nevermore, will be published in March 2010.

Hart has also taught, lectured, or given workshops at Florida State University, the Cape May Institute, The United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, George Mason University, Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida Community College, Old Dominion University, Eastern Shore Community College, Tidewater Community College, Christopher Newport University, and The New College in Sarasota, Florida . Her work has been featured on Voice of America and in Poets and Writers Magazine, as well as on the syndicated PBS television series “Writer To Writer.”  Hart currently teaches in the Wilkes University Low-Residency MA/MFA in Creative Writing program.  She lives on the Eastern Shore of Virginia with her husband, novelist David Poyer, and their daughter Naia.


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