
About Me
I’ve always been drawn to adventure -- at least to writing about it. My subjects are real women who have broken with convention to create new lives for themselves even as they change the world.
The Spitfire pilots lived an adventure more exciting than fiction. They were celebrated at the time but then largely forgotten. To bring them back to life, I traveled to England to go through records, investigate crashes, find witnesses, and take in the history of the airfields, country estates, and London hotels and clubs where the story took place.
In the United States, I met the pilots' families and interviewed Nancy Miller, the one flyer still living at the age of 104. They all shared diaries and letters filled with intimate details, never before seen by the public.
I grew up in rural Pennsylvania and moved to New York to earn a master’s degree at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where I was awarded the Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship. I had a blast covering the worlds of entertainment, media, and other creative industries for BusinessWeek and New York Newsday.
When I was widowed at a young age, I decided to leave daily journalism and write the book Saturday Night Widows. It’s the true story of how I put together a mismatched group of five other young widows to share the adventure of remaking our lives. We remain great friends today.
My next book was Off the Cliff, about the maverick filmmakers who created the classic women's film Thelma & Louise.
My books and I have appeared on CBS This Morning, the Katie Couric Show, NPR, and in articles in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and O, the Oprah magazine. I’ve spoken to groups across the country.
My day-to-day life remains much less exciting than the people I write about, which is fine with me.

Credit Elena Seibert