Jennifer Lauck (born December 15, 1963) is an American fiction and non-fiction author, essayist, speaker and writing instructor.
Early life and education
Lauck is the American author of four books including the New York Times best seller Blackbird.[1] Her writing has been published in the U.S. and around the world, translated into several languages. Much of her popularity began when she appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show in 2000 and Winfrey held the book up to her audience saying, "This should have been a book of the month book. Read it now."[2][3]Blackbird debuted on The New York Times Best Seller list in November 2000,[4] dropping off and then returning in January 2001.[5]
Born in
Reno, Nevada, Lauck split her early childhood between the states of Nevada and California, with her adoptive family. After her mother died in 1971, Lauck remained with her adoptive father and brother until her father died in 1973. At that time, Lauck was separated from her adoptive brother and raised in Nevada and
Washington state, adopted a second time by the paternal side of her adoptive family.
Professional career
Lauck's adulthood was spent in Washington,
Montana and
Oregon where she studied journalism at
Montana State University and then took a reporting job with the
Montana Television Network. Lauck's journalism career took her to
Spokane, Washington, where she worked for
KXLY-TV, then Portland, Oregon, where she worked for
KATU-TV as a news producer and special reports producer. Her reports, investigative journalism, appeared on
CNN and the ABC Nightly News. She has been nominated for several Society of Journalists awards and won Best News Story of the year for her report on an abduction case in Washington State.[6]
Lauck discussed her reasons for writing her first and subsequent memoirs with
Literary Mama, "...memoir writing was born from the realization that I wanted to have children. I knew I had to go through some deep self-examination before bringing forth a child and I knew traditional avenues of therapy would never give me the insights and relative self-mastery I needed to be a competent mother."[7] The international bestseller Blackbird detailed Lauck's memory of childhood and was followed by her next book, Still Waters,[8] that took her to her 30s and the birth of her first child. In Still Waters, Lauck describes her writing of her second book as attempt to understand the suicide death of her adoptive brother, whom she was separated from as a young girl.[9] She followed Still Waters with a collection of short stories titled Show Me the Way,[10] in which she took a closer look at her parenting of her two children. She also wrote and published essays for
Literary Mama and anthology collections[11] on parenting.
Moved by the number of letters received in support for her writing, as well as the sharing of personal tragedies in those fan letters, Lauck felt ill-equipped to respond skillfully and turned to study of
Tibetan Buddhism[12] under American masters
Anne Klein,[13]Harvey Aronson,
Joanna Macy,[14] and
Lama Tsultrim Allione,[15] as well as Tibetan master Adzom Rinpoche.[16] While studying Buddhist theory and practicing meditation, Lauck turned her writing toward larger spiritual questions,[17] publishing several essays in
Lion's Roar[18] and
Buddha Dharma.[19]
In 2007, Lauck continued to explore her life further and discovered the impact of her adoption[20] through studies with adoption experts
Nancy Verrier, author of The Primal Wound, and Coming Home to Self, and
Betty Jean Lifton, author of several books on the topic of adoption.[21] After hiring an investigator, Lauck found her original birth family and reunited with them in 2008.[22] Seal Press released her fourth memoir, titled Found: A Memoir & True Sequel to Blackbird,[23] focused on the impact of adoption and Lauck's reunion with her birth family.
Lauck has a BA in journalism from
Montana State University and MFA in creative writing from
Pacific Lutheran University and has taught writing for 12 years, most recently for The Attic Institute, as a Senior Fellow.[24][25] Lauck travels to speak on a variety of topics including motherhood, empowerment of women, writing, adoption, foster care, abandonment, early loss, Tibetan Buddhism, and mediation.[26]