Kathleen Hirsch
Kathleen Hirsch (born June 1, 1953) is an American author.
Hirsch received her B.A. in political science and English in 1975 at Mount Holyoke College and her M.F.A in fiction writing from Brown University in 1979. She joined the staff of The Boston Phoenix in 1983, reporting on Boston's subcultures and marginal populations. She profiled two homeless women in a book, "Songs from the Alley." [1]
She has taught writing at Boston College, Harvard University, Wellesley College, and Brown University. She is a contributor to the Boston Globe's Catholic news site, Crux.[1]
Works
- 2001: A Sabbath Life: A Woman's Search for Wholeness (ISBN 978-0385412773)
- 1998: A Home in the Heart of a City: A Woman's Search for Community (ISBN 978-0374280796)
- 1997: "Mothers: Twenty Stories of Contemporary Motherhood" - co-editor with Katrina Kenison (ISBN 978-0865475113)
- 1989: Songs from the Alley (ISBN 978-0385412773)
gollark: The somewhat new GPT-3 thing can even add four-digit numbers, despite being trained as a text generation thing on vast volumes of internet content originally.
gollark: Machine learning stuff is getting impressively good at some tasks.
gollark: What about? The masks thing?
gollark: I mean, at one point he said something along the lines of "test less so our case numbers are lower".
gollark: Trump really seems to actively be trying to make the US's situation *worse*.
References
- "Kathleen Hirsch". Crux: Covering all things Catholic. Boston Globe Media Partners. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
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