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Martha Miller  — Biography
 

 

 

    

 

 

 

 



 

 

Martha Miller was born Martha Jane Thompson on December 21, 1947. She is the first daughter of Carl Edward and Geraldine Thompson. She would eventually have two younger sisters, both very close in age. She grew up in one of those post-WWII housing developments: 900 square feet, which looked like the neighbor’s 900 square feet, and the 900 square feet across the street. Her father was a motorcycle enthusiast though he worked from the time he came home from the South Pacific until his retirement at Allis Chalmers—a tractor factory. While other families’ recreation consisted of camping and car trips to the ocean, in the Thompson family everything centered on the motorcycle: hill climbs, beer parties, races and etc. Martha learned to ride and had her own Harley 125 when she was eleven.


Martha graduated from Feitshans High School, in 1965, with unremarkable (in fact, poor) grades. More than a few times she was busted working on her novel rather than doing school work in the class room--especially math. Her interest in books and reading and writing was influenced by her mother who read to the three girls before bedtime (Anne of Green Gables), a fifth grade teacher who read the entire Laura Ingles Wilder series one chapter at a time all through the school year, and her grandmother, her father’s mother, who kept Classic Comic Books and a complete set of Zane Grey westerns at her house. Martha was twelve when she read grandma’s copy of Gone With the Wind the first time.

Upon graduating High School, at the age of seventeen, she left home. She worked as a waitress first at the train station and then at the Greyhound Bus station. She eventually met Lloyd Pratt (a much older man) and was married to him for two and a half years. About a year after her divorce she married Phillip Dale Miller and in the next fifteen years had two sons: Phillip and Andrew. While her sons were still young, Martha started college and earned an Associates degree in 1984.

May 5, 1984 Martha was introduced to Bill Wilson, and she has been a steady friend of his since then. Only in sobriety did her writing take form. "I used to get drunk on tequila and write poems about murder," claims Miller. "But in sobriety writing became less haphazard. I worked on longer projects." Miller started taking writing classes at Sangamon State University. Her first class was with the poet John Knoepfle. The second was with Jacqueline Jackson who became a good friend and mentor. While at Sangamon State and later the University of Illinois, Springfield, she took as many writing classes as she could, mastering first the short story and then the novel.

She worked at Springfield Marine Bank, which was later bought by Bank One, which was later bought by Chase Bank. She worked at the bank for 27 years from 1972 through 2000 when her department was downsized. She used her severance money to finish graduate school and in the fall of 2001 started teaching part time at Richland Community College and the following summer at Lincoln Land Community College.

In 1989, Miller divorced her husband and got involved in a lesbian relationship (not necessarily in that order). After that time she primarily wrote about gay and lesbian stories themes. Early in the 1990 Miller joined the Sangamon Writers group. This group met in the home of Tim Osburn and Becky Bradway. At the Sangamon Writers group meetings on Friday nights everyone took writing seriously. Some of the best writers in the area sat in Osburn’s living room, shared their work, critiqued others, and learned from each other. Osburn and Bradway were at that time publishing an arts magazine called The Writer’s Bar-B Q. So Miller got some experience both publishing and editing. She also started working on her first book. It was there she met the poet and playwright Shannon Keith Kelley. He encouraged her to write plays. "For a while everyone was writing plays," Miller says. Kelley had started his own theater company "Mid America Playwrights’ Theatre" or "MAPS Theatre." Miller had four plays produced at MAPS Theatre. "Billy’s Voice," a one act play about a woman who’s lost her son to AIDS grew out of that friendship. "Billy’s Voice" had four encore performances and it was published in the arts journal modern words.

During the AIDS epidemic in the early 1990's the writer Paul Monette published a book of autobiographic essays titled, Last Watch of the Night.   Monette had died of Aids before the book came out.   Then the first of Miller's friend's succumbed to the disease. Watching this sad piece of history unfold, Miller was struck by the isolation and and hopelessness of the victims and those who loved them.  Paul Monet’s book inspired Miller to teach people living with AIDS to write memoirs. She developed a five week workshop in which a group of men wrote stories about themselves. She received a Lila Wallace Grant and arranged for a space at the local SARA (Springfield AIDS Resource Association) Center. The guys in that group met for a couple of years after the workshop was finished until one by one they died.

Tales from the Levee actually started out as a few short stories. Miller had already published short stories in Common Lives/Lesbian Lives and On Our Backs when she wrote "Lady Verushka’s Lover." This story about a drag queen (based on a guy who preformed in the local gay bars) and his straight boyfriend was published in a periodical called Amethyst. Next she wrote a purely fictional story about the Orpheum Lounge titled "The Cajun Dancer." By then she had the idea for a book. She started talking to people in the gay and lesbian community in Springfield and these conversations gradually became taped interviews. "We just sat around and talked about the old days," says Miller. "And now and then someone would relate a story." Some of the stories in the book came from those interviews and many were her own the creations. In 1995 Miller submitted the manuscript, Tales from the Levee, to the Friends of Lincoln Library Writer of the Year contest. It took the honors for best fiction. That year Miller was recognized by the Illinois Times Reader’s Poll as the best writer in Springfield, and she also won an Illinois Art’s Council award for her writing.

To her disappointment Tales from the Levee did not find a publisher. Miller received several nice rejections. The one from New Victoria Press asked her to keep them in mind if she had another manuscript for them to look at. From her first publication in On Our Backs, Miller made money writing lesbian erotica. "Lesbian sex scenes are hard to write," claims Miller. "Our language is patriarchal and the words don’t really exist to describe what two women do in bed together." Susie Bright and other publishers often contacted Miller for contributions to their latest projects. The erotic stories she’d published added up to a complete manuscript. She sent a collection of these stories to New Victoria Press and they were accepted. Skin to Skin: Erotic Lesbian Love Stories earned some good reviews and sold well. In 2000, New Victoria published Miller’s second book, Nine Nights on the Windy Tree and in 2003 they published Dispatch to Death. Both of these books have leading characters that were first introduced in Skin to Skin. Both got positive reviews.

After letting the manuscript sit for a few years, in 2003 Miller started sending Tales from the Levee around to publishers again. By now she knew why she had problems finding a publisher.  After buying and reading gay and lesbian literature for a few years, she noticed that publishers published the girls or the boys but not both. Since New Victoria had already rejected the manuscript, Miller looked in the gay and lesbian magazines and sent her manuscript to the publishers who advertised. In 2004, almost a year after she’d submitted Tales from the Levee to Harrington Press, she got a contract in the mail. It is due out in November 2005.

Martha Miller still lives in Springfield. She still teaches writing. And she’s still plugging away writing stories like the ones she loves to read. Miller’s sons are now grown. She lives with her partner Ann, who she reefers to as Girlfriend in her "Martha [lesbian] Living" column that she writes for The Prairie Flame. Miller and Girlfriend lead a quiet (sometimes reclusive) life with their two dogs and two cats in a bi-level house that has over 900 square feet on each floor.

 

Publications

Books

Dispatch to Death: A Mystery.  Novel.  New Victoria Publishers.  Vermont. This book is scheduled to be published in the fall of 2003.

Nine Nights on the Windy Tree; A Mystery. Novel.  New Victoria Publishers.  Vermont.  2000.  This book has been translated to German and republished in 2001 by Adriane Krimi 1135, Argument Verlag. 

Skin to Skin. Short fiction.  New Victoria Publishers.  Vermont.  1998.

Short Fiction

“Elise Riley” (Anthology) Women Writing Mysteries. ed. by Katherine Forrest.  Spinster’s Ink.  Winter.  2004.

"Unsent Letter."  (Anthology) All the Women Were Heroes, 1998.

"Garden of the Hungry Cats."  (Anthologies)  Sappho Says 1999, All the Women Were Heroes, 1998; Common Lives, Vol. #42, Spring 1992, Skin to Skin, New Victoria Press, 1998.

"The Sirocco."  Bad Attitude, Spring 1996.

"Hormones."  Herotica 4, New American Library/Plume Spring 1996.

"Billy's Voice."  (Play)  modern words, Summer 1995.

"Best Friends."  Herotica 3, NAL-Plume, Spring 1994.

"Life Signs."  The Evergreen Chronicles, Fall 1993.

"Seductions."  Herotica 2, Plume, Spring 1992.

"Tell Me About California."  Common Lives Vol. #42, Spring     1992.

"Gremlins and Gypsy Moths."  The Evergreen Chronicles, Summer 1991.

"Mea Culpa." (Anthologies) The Alchemist, Spring 1991; Common Lives Vol. # 31, Summer 1989.

"Reflections on Mars; or Sunrise on the 405."  Common Lives  Vol. # 37, Winter 1991.

"Scar Tissue."  Battered But Not Broken, Fall 1990.

"Lady Verushka's Lover."  Amethyst, Summer 1990.

"Last Trip to the Yukon."  The Writer's Bar B-Q, Vol. # 5, Spring 1990.

"Obsession."  On Our Backs, May-June 1990.

"Queen of Tanqueray."  Common Lives Vol. # 25, Winter 1988.

"Watch of the Valkyrie."  On Our Backs, Summer 1988.

"Shark's Tooth."  The Writer's Bar B-Q, Vol. # 3, Fall 1988.

"Needs."  Lovtann (translated) Oslo Norway, Winter 1989.  Common Lives, Vol. # 2, Spring 1987.

 

Creative Non-Fiction

“No Queens on Pickett Street.”  (Anthology) The Middle of the Middle West: An Anthology of Creative Non-Fiction, Ed. Becky Bradway. Indiana University Press. Spring 2003.

 

Plays: Written and Produced

Where the Heart Is, produced by Mid-America Playwrights Theater, February   1996.

Trouble at Third and Delaware, produced by Mid-America Playwrights Theater, February 1995.

Billy's Voice, produced by Williams Theater Group, Philadelphia, PA. Castro Theater Group, San Francisco, CA. 1998,  MAPS Theater in conjunction with the AIDS Taskforce, Springfield IL, four encore productions: 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995.  Recently produced (2002) at UIS for a fund-raiser for women’s scholarships.

Fat Girls and Red Dresses, produced by MAPS Theater, December 1991.

 

Journals and Newsletters

“Why Teens Still Smoke.” Illinois Times.  January 31, 2003.  An article about tobacco settlement money going into state budgets, anti-smoking ads, and the fact that teen smoking has increased over 70% in the last ten years.

“Martha Living.” Prairie Flame.  This is a monthly column (a send up) like Martha Steward’s only mine is for the domestically challenged.

“Better Late Than Never” Illinois Times.  Springfield, Illinois.  Feb. 21, 2002.  An article about the VIA-Literacy program that teaches adults to read and tutors them for the GED.

Third Space; a Woman’s Peer Review Journal, published a book review. The Life of  Dorothy Richardson.  Fall 2001.

“People and Folks: Springfield Street Gangs.”  Illinois Times.  Springfield, Illinois.   Summer 2001.

“Cops and Authors,”  Illinois Times.  Springfield, Illinois.  Fall 2000.

Harvard G&L Review, review of a novel, The Silk Road, Fall 2000.

Lambda Book Report, review of a novel, Unforgettable, July 2000.

"Kate Clinton Interview,"  Illinois Times.  Springfield, Illinois.  Winter 2000.

"Ruth Ellis Comes Home," an article, Illinois Times, September 1999.

Monthly Book Review Column for SALO Newsletter.  Review women’s books from small and independent presses. 

Also published book reviews in: Hag Rag, Common Lives, Brother-to -Brother Newsletter and NCASA Journal, Harvard Review and Lambda Book Report.

Manuscript Judging

The Alchemist, a student publication at University of Illinois at Springfield, critiqued student submissions of short fiction, poetry and art and rated the submissions for the final editor.  1999

"On My Own Time," a literary competition sponsored by the Springfield Area Arts Council, 1997.

"The Write Stuff," a young adult writing competition sponsored by the Lincoln Library in which winners were published in a literary magazine called The Write Stuff.  1996.

Illinois Writers Inc., judged manuscripts for a short fiction Chap Book   Competition, 1995. 

  

Volunteer Work

VIA-Literacy Program at Lawrence Adult Education Center in Springfield, Current.  I work under the supervision of Amy Smith.  I tutor adult students in reading.

 

McClernon Elementary School.  School year of 1999-2000.  I worked in the Mentor Program and mentored a girl in third grade.  I helped her with homework, taught her to play jacks and read to her one lunch hour a week.

 

Sojourn Women’s Center.  1980-1984.  Worked the hotline on the weekends.  Covered overnight shifts for staff counselors. Did lay counseling to women and children in domestic violence crisis.

 

 

 

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