About

“I can not thank you enough for what you contributed in words . . . You took the time to put the story together with such care and attention to dramatic tension and resolution that I’m enjoying reading it myself!”
Lucie Morton, renowned viticulturist, author, and lecturer,
St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes School alumna

I began my career in book publishing at W. W. Norton & Company, where I worked for 13 years developing ideas for health and wellness books, finding authors to write them, and partnering closely with those authors to structure, edit, and bring their books to life. 

In 2015, I became Senior Writer in the Office of Communication at The Pingry School, helping to redesign their award-winning alumni magazine as well as generate and write its feature articles. I contributed to the school’s website redesign and penned quite a bit of web copy, online news articles, and scripts for marketing videos, among other projects. Over the course of six years working “in house,” my writing also served a variety of the school’s internal and external communication needs, from Head of School letters to Strategic Plan updates. 

Now, as a freelance writer for K-12 independent schools as well as colleges and universities, I get to marry my passion for meaningful content development and execution from my years as a book editor with my love of campus communities and the remarkable people and stories within them.

Schools are busy places. I know this from experience. Sussing out stories quickly and thoughtfully so my clients can focus on myriad other communication needs is what I do best. From longer-form human interest pieces and people profiles to marketing copy, strategic communication, those pesky annual state-of-school letters, and anything in between, I help schools connect, engage, and maybe even call their communities to action.

I live in New Jersey, by way of NYC, but my heart will always reside in Vermont. I’ll run, bike, or cross-country ski on any lazy country road or mountain trail offered up. When I’m not writing, I’m reading. Or driving my two daughters to soccer practice. Or cooking up the latest plant-based stew that piques my interest, despite the grimaces of aforementioned daughters.