![]() ![]() ![]() Soon, Jan was publishing weekly installments about Father Tim in her local newspaper, The Blowing Rocket, which saw its circulation double as a result. She grew curious and started writing about a character she named Father Tim Kavanagh. ![]() After struggling-and failing-to get a novel underway, Jan awoke one night with a mental image of an Episcopal priest walking down a village street. At the age of 50, she left her career in advertising and moved to Blowing Rock, North Carolina, to pursue that dream. While there, she won the prestigious Stephen Kelly Award, with which the Magazine Publishers of America honor the year’s best print campaign.ĭuring her years in advertising, Jan kept alive her childhood ambition to be an author. In time, she became a creative vice president at the high-profile McKinney & Silver. Jan went on to have a highly successful career in the field, winning awards for ad agencies from Charlotte to San Francisco. She advanced in the company after leaving samples of her writing on the desk of her boss, who eventually noticed her talent. She penned her first novel when she was 10 years old, the same year she won a short-story contest organized by the local high school.Īt 18, Jan began working as a receptionist for a Charlotte, N.C. Jan knew at a very early age that she wanted to be a writer. Born Janice Meredith Wilson in 1937, Jan Karon was raised on a farm near Lenoir, North Carolina. ![]()
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