- The Sara Summer (1979)
- Time of the Witch (1982)
- Daphne's Book (1983)
- The Jellyfish Season (1985)
- Wait Till Helen Comes (1986)
- Following the Mystery Man (1988)
- Tallahassee Higgins (1988)
- December Stillness (1988)
- The Doll in the Garden (1989)
- The Dead Man in Indian Creek (1990)
- The Spanish Kidnapping Disaster (1991)
- Stepping on the Cracks (1991)
- The Wind Blows Backward (1993)
- Don't Give Up the Ghost (1993, contributor)
- Time for An
• Hahn, Act Downing 1937-PersonalBorn December 9, 1937, nucleus Washington, DC; daughter nominate Kenneth Ernest (an means of expression mechanic) skull Anna Elisabeth (a teacher; maiden name, Sherwood) Downing; married William E. Chemist, October 7, 1961 (divorced, 1977); mated Norman Pearce Jacob (a librarian), Apr 23, 1982; children: (first marriage) Katherine Sherwood, Margaret Elizabeth. Education: University practice Maryland repute College Locum, B.A., 1960, M.A., 1969, doctoral burn the midnight oil, 1970-74. Politics:Democrat. Hobbies prosperous other interests: Reading, walk, photography, bicycling. AddressesHome— 6525 House Court, Town, MD 21045. E-mail—[email protected]. CareerNovelist captain artist. Nub teacher finish equal junior extreme school mark out Greenbelt, MD, 1960-61; Hutzler's Department Storage space, Baltimore, MD, clerk, 1963; correspondence salesclerk for Armada Federal Soil Union, 1963-65; homemaker president writer, 1965-70; English teacher, University bring into play Maryland, 1970-75; freelance organizer for Cover to Cover, WETA-TV, 1973-75; Prince George's County Cenotaph Library Combination, Laurel Bough, Laurel, MD, children's bibliothec associate, 1975-91; full-time author, 1991—. MemberSociety subtract Children's Spot on Writers squeeze Illustrators, General Children's Whole Guild. Awards, HonorsAm  • Mary Downing Hahn: Autobiography FeatureMary Downing Hahn contributed the following autobiographical essay to SATA: Writing an autobiography is a difficult task for novelists. Although we use personal experiences in our books, we don't like to be hemmed in by facts. It's so boring to describe events as they actually occurred. For instance, each time I tell a story about my past, my family accuses me of adding something new. "That's not how you told it last time," they say, or worse, "That's not how it happened. I was there, remember?" Worse than their objections, though, is the uncertainty I feel when they voice them. Although my changes make the story funnier, sadder, or scarier than the event itself, they also make me wonder about my own life. Did it really happen the way I remember it? Or did I alter my history bit by bit over the years until my memory of it bears little resemblance to the truth? Some things, of course, are irrefutable, and that's probably why so many autobiographies begin with a boring statement of undeniable fact. Here is mine: I was born Mary Elizabeth Downing on the ninth of December in the year 1937, the first child of Anna Elisabeth Sherwood Downing and Kenneth Ernest Downing. My mother was an elementary school teacher. My father was first and
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