³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų English instructor achieves authorship dream
The fall semester has started at ³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų, but one English professor is
absent from campus for the first time in a decade.
For the past eight years, Dr. Lisa DāAmico, pen name Lisa Edmonds, has devoted her time outside of academia to developing her Alice Worth series which has garnered such a large audience that this past year she knew it was time to take the plunge into becoming a full-time author.
āIāve always written,ā she said. āI wrote my first story when I was 6. Thatās when I knew I wanted to be a storyteller. But a writer has to be able to pay the bills.ā
She started college as an international business and Spanish double major thanks to a scholarship from the School of Business at Wichita State University but soon changed her focus of study.
āAll it took was one accounting class for me to realize that was not going to be my day job,ā she said. āSo, I switched to being an English major my sophomore year. And thatās also when I came under the wing of a great English professor who introduced me to the awesomeness of being a college professor.ā
It made sense. Her parents taught in the Kā12 setting, and teaching English in higher education would allow her the flexibility to pursue her writing goals.
After earning her bachelorās degree in English, DāAmico completed her masterās degree at Wichita State, her doctorate degree at Texas A&M and found her way to ³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų.
From basic composition classes to specialized literature courses in āmonsters and monstrosities,ā DāAmicoās favorite part of teaching was cultivating studentsā critical thinking skills, structuring arguments and finding supporting evidence.
āThose are universal skills,ā she said. āNo matter what field you go into, youāll be writing. And the further up the ladder you go, the more writing youāll have to do.ā
She also appreciated the community created in the classroom, where the students could learn from one another. Itās what sheās going to miss the most.
āI learned so much from my students because we all have different backgrounds, and though I may know more in my subject area, they bring different perspectives to whatever weāre reading or discussing,ā DāAmico said. āIt could be something Iāve read dozens and dozens of times, and I canāt think of an exception to a student noticing something I havenāt.ā
DāAmico came on as a faculty member at ³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų the same semester as fellow English instructor Dr. Trey Jansen. They became good friends and worked together as advisors for the Phi Theta Kappa honor society.
āMy favorite memories are when we would chat about the books she was working on,ā Jansen said. āIt was a joy to see her imagination at work and a treat, as someone who spends most of the time editing, to get to offer an oddball idea on occasion.ā
When she wasnāt lecturing or grading papers, DāAmico spent most of her waking hours at The Full Cup, a Weatherford coffee shop, creating the world of Alice Worth, a magic-wielding private investigator with a ghost sidekick and a werewolf love interest. And thereās vampires too.
DāAmico grew up reading Nancy Drew and, by her teens, was invested in hardboiled detective fiction, sci-fi and fantasy. The one thing missing in many of these stories? A strong female lead.
Enter the urban fantasy genre, which DāAmico dove into and added a paranormal twist with a focus on what she calls her self-rescuing princess who isnāt afraid to race towards the impossible and is looking for a romantic partner who is their equal.
āAnd thatās really what the Alice books are,ā she said. āItās an amalgamation of all those things. I wanted a private investigator, a la Sue Grafton and Sara Paretsky. And I want it to have supernatural elements and fantastic things. Alice is all of those things coming together.ā
Bridget Talmage, one of the owners of The Full Cup, remembers when Edmonds first started coming into the coffee shop to grade papers. A few months later, she brought the first chapter of her book up to the counter and asked Talmage and her business partner, Jennifer DeWitt, to read it.
āAnd thatās how she started,ā Talmage said. āWe got to the end of the chapter and turned the page looking for more.ā
Talmage and DeWitt, have supported many local authors by selling their books in the store, but Edmonds is the only one who made The Full Cup their second home while writing.
āShe had her own key to the store,ā Talmage said. āSo, if she wanted to stay late, she could lock up when she was done.ā
DāAmico completed her first novel, āHeart of Malice,ā in 2015 and had a publication offer from the small indie company City Owl Press four months later. Her book was available to the public on her birthday in June 2017.
The novel exceeded expectations for a debut author, and DāAmico immediately started writing book number two, āHeart of Fire,ā along with the novella āBlood Money.ā By the time her third novel was published, Kindle Unlimited and Audible had picked up the series.
DāAmicoās goal had always been to become a full-time author. And last year, she began to feel the weight of teaching, writing and marketing herself.
āIt was becoming difficult to do everything to the best of my ability,ā she said. āThen the Storybook House went up for sale, and it was like, āYouāre out of excuses now.āā
The Storybook House is a Victorian-inspired home in Little Rock, Arkansas, next door to her sister, that DāAmico has dreamed of living in for the past eight years.
āMy sister and I nicknamed it The Storybook House because it looks like an author should live there; it looks like something out of a storybook,ā she said. āBut never, ever did I imagine getting to own it.ā
When it went on the market in October 2022, DāAmico and her husband, Bill, immediately put in an offer, and in 48 hours it seemed her entire world had changed. But really, it was just the puzzle pieces falling into place.
She finished the school year and spent the summer packing and saying her goodbyes with more mixed emotions than she expected.
āI really do love teaching. Itās going to be tough to not be in the classroom,ā she said. āIām so grateful for my time at ³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų. My colleagues are amazing, and Iām going to miss them so much.ā
As a published author, she was a popular guest speaker with the Creative Writing Club led by English instructor Dr. Diann Ainsworth.
āWorking with Lisa has always been fun,ā Ainsworth said. āLisa has offered students tips about writing fiction and suggestions for getting their writing published, and she has shown our students that dreams of being a published author do come true with a lot of hard work and creativity.ā
While her friends at ³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų are back in the classroom for a new semester, DāAmico is settling into her new writing space in Arkansas and working on Alice Worth book nine. She has a contract for the series to go through book 12, plus some short stories mingled in along the way and the first four books of a new series.
With plenty to keep her busy writing for the next four years, DāAmicoās next goal is to find an agent so she can pitch her work to one of the five large publishing companies. And one day, her friends at ³Ō¹Ļ¹ŁĶų may see her grace a national best-seller list.
āLisaās departure from academia marks a bittersweet farewell, but as she embarks on
this new chapter her talent and dedication will undoubtedly continue to shine through
the pages of her stories,ā said English instructor Dr. Shannon Vails. āWe both miss
her and celebrate her success.ā
(Photo by Madison Hurley Photography of Hot Springs, Arkansas)