For Wiggs, writing has always been a part of her life for as long as she can remember. At the age of three, she was drawing pictures and having her mother dictate them to create her first stories. She reflected, “There was never a time when I didn’t think in stories, and I didn’t think like a writer, and I didn’t think in paragraphs, and in chapters… I got addicted to writing, I just fell in love with it! I loved the attention from readers, I loved feeling like I had a mission, you know, to entertain and to take somebody somewhere…” After her family moved from America to Europe when she was a child, she continued to immerse herself in reading and writing. “One thing that [living abroad] did teach me was… to pay attention to the world around me and to be such a reader… I always would seek out libraries and books even then, and so stories have always been a part of my life no matter where I go.”

We underestimate what a creative act reading is. I believe that the reader brings herself, her intellect, her emotions to the story and so I don’t have to overexplain things.”


When it feels disheartening to learn that trauma changes the brain, remember that healing changes the brain too.”
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