About Nancy Chadwick

NANCY CHADWICK is an essayist, memoirist, and fiction writer. She got her first job at Leo Burnett advertising agency in Chicago. After a decade there, and later, another decade in corporate banking, she quit and began to write full time, finding inspiration from her years living in Chicago and in San Francisco. Nancy is the author of Under the Birch Tree: A Memoir of Discovering Connections and Finding Home, The Wisdom of the Willow, a novel, and has also written essays that have appeared in The Magic of Memoir: Inspiration for the Writing Journey, Adelaide Literary Magazine, Meaningful Conflicts – The Art of Friction, Writer’s Digest, blogs by the Chicago Writers Association Write City, and Brevity.

Life is Good

. . . exerpt from Under the Birch Tree We took photographs in front of the picture window at our brick house on Carlisle Street because it was the perfect suburban backdrop. Two-story homes sat like gems on their velvet lawns set with oak and maple trees and manicured hedges. I remember my picture was taken there on my first [...]

2013-03-14T19:01:13+00:00March 14, 2013|Categories: book writing, memoir, Writing|Tags: , , , , |

Did you get lucky?

Now before you start scanning this post looking for juicy, eye-catching tidbits suggesting anything sexual, let me tell you this question has nothing to do with sex and everything to do with luck. Or is it really luck? In a previous post I talked about being asked what it is I "do." And, in turn, I ask others what it [...]

2013-03-12T21:10:21+00:00March 12, 2013|Categories: memoir, writers, Writing|

How do they do it?

I've been writing now for over ten years. When I started, I didn't have much to say, but I had much to say. What I mean is, I had many thoughts I wanted to express but I couldn't seem to get it all down. I knew in the end, there was a story, a lesson, perhaps. And my challenge was [...]

2013-03-08T20:21:43+00:00March 8, 2013|Categories: memoir, writers, Writing|Tags: , , |

Carlisle Street

The folded blueprints I plucked from my grey bucket came from the building department at the village. They felt like a treasure in my hands; I wanted to delve into them with abandon. I separated the inky paper folds, spreading the map flat on the floor. I squatted to read the details of the reverse print. The building commissioner had [...]

2013-03-05T17:26:19+00:00March 5, 2013|Categories: book writing, memoir, Writing|Tags: , , , , |

Bucket List

At first, I didn't know what a bucket list was until I saw the movie, "The Bucket List." What a great idea! Now all my "to-do's" have a name - they are now called my "bucket list." But something wasn't right. A bucket list appeared to be for those who have an impending sense of end of life. They want [...]

2013-03-04T16:22:07+00:00March 4, 2013|Categories: memoir, Writing|

Reinvention or Forks?

I make no excuses. I don't even justify why anymore. I look back on my years, (I really think "my years" started after college) and realize when I was asked, "So, what do you do?" I never had an answer. I responded, "I work at an ad agency," or "I work for a bank." or "I write." I never quite [...]

2013-03-01T19:28:50+00:00March 1, 2013|Categories: Writing|Tags: , , |

Chasing Flap Copy

I've read them all - on plot, beginnings, middles and ends, writing life stories, memoir, personal essays and whatever falls in between. Writers of these books have been prolific with general guidance and "how to"  described in no uncertain abstract terms. Finally, I succumbed to just one more read on the memoir subject. "Writing & Selling Memoir" by Paula Balzer [...]

2013-02-28T19:34:40+00:00February 28, 2013|Categories: Writing|Tags: , , , , |

I’m New Here!

Do you ever think how new you are to things? You walk into a new grocery store, and you're new, you don't have the aisles down. You drive to a neighboring town, one you've never had to stop before, until today.  You don't know how to get to where you need to be. You're new. Or you decided to take [...]

2013-02-26T22:51:23+00:00February 26, 2013|Categories: Writing|Tags: |
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