Talking about Writing with Pamela Toler, Author of Women Warriors
/Pamela Toler, author of Women Warriors, explains how she organized research that spanned epochs, continents, and personalities.
Read MoreBlogging about abolitionist Julia Wilbur, the Civil War, Alexandria, women's rights, and more
Pamela Toler, author of Women Warriors, explains how she organized research that spanned epochs, continents, and personalities.
Read MoreWhat do Langston Hughes, Myrna Loy, and Blanca Verala have in common? They all lived in D.C., as did hundreds more writers you do and do not already know.
Read MoreOne great benefit in writing about Julia Wilbur has been talking with other authors about their biographies. Such as—Candice Shy Hooper, author of Lincoln’s Generals’ Wives.
Read MoreHere’s a short hand-out that I used at a writing-for-publication workshop last week.
Read MoreIn which I learn more from the author about the life of female government employees (including Julia Wilbur) in the 1860s.
Read MoreMy own panel, and lots more learned (and a shot in the arm) from colleagues.
Read MoreThis could be you. At a little, round table with an agent to make an in-person pitch. Washington Writers Conference, May 4-5.
Read MoreHot Christmas gift in 1853-1854: Autographs for Freedom, compiled by the Rochester Ladies Anti-Slavery Society.
Read MoreWant to give someone a signed copy of A Civil Life in an Uncivil Time from afar? Here's the solution
Read MoreI hope my guest blog for the University of Nebraska Press gives you some useful tips to go from diary pages to a narrative.
Read Morei got to volunteer at the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities' booth at the National Book Festival.
Read MoreHistorian and author Pamela Toler posed some questions to me about Julia Wilbur and Civil War Alexandria.
Read MoreA pearl of wisdom here, a comment there, by authors at the Gaithersburg Book Festival.
Read MoreSo many boxes, so little time! How to make the best use of a trip to an archives.
Read MoreWhat will a trip to the Kiplinger Library at the DC Historical Society (future home of an Apple Store) reveal?
Read MoreJulia Ward Howe & Julia Wilbur traveled in different circles--but they did connect at least once.
Read MoreA few notes from Heroines of Mercy Street, by Pamela Toler.
Read MoreDoes your next (or first) book lie behind this door? Learn a bit about the Manuscript Division at the Library of Congress.
Read MoreWashington, DC, September 24, 2016--opening of African American History Museum and Library of Congress Book Festival. September 24, 1866--visits to Andrew Johnson and a cure for a "secret disease"
Read MorePaula Tarnapol Whitacre's website with a focus on her forthcoming biography on abolitionist Julia Wilbur.