快活app

Skip to Content

Turning Curiosity Into Creative Writing

Back to News Listing

Author(s)

Tamara Chapman

Senior Managing Editor

Senior Managing Editor"

Tamara.Chapman@du.edu

Profile  •
Samantha Seiple

When curiosity seizes alumna Samantha Seiple (BA 鈥89), she knows just what to do: write a book. 听

To date she has populated some significant shelf space with an array of nonfiction titles, most of them directed at young adult readers. Her books examine everything from the dog-accompanied adventures of a polar explorer to the Japanese occupation of Alaska鈥檚 Aleutian Islands during World War II. Still another page-turner, 鈥淣azi Saboteurs鈥 鈥 the true story of a little-reported attempt to destroy critical infrastructure on U.S. soil 鈥 is due in bookstores later this year.

鈥淚 think what I鈥檓 really attracted to are stories that either have been forgotten or overlooked,鈥 Seiple says.

Overlooked perhaps, but not for lack of nerdy razzmatazz. Take her most recent offering, 鈥淟ouisa on the Front Lines鈥 (Seal Press, 2019), a riveting account of writer Louisa May Alcott鈥檚 stint as a nurse during the darkest days of the Civil War. It鈥檚 Seiple鈥檚 first book for an adult audience and one sure to resonate with Alcott鈥檚 multigenerational fan base, for whom her best-known work, 鈥淟ittle Women,鈥 ranks as formative reading. (Like Alcott鈥檚 most fervent devotees, Seiple has read 鈥淟ittle Women鈥 several times. 鈥淢y grandmother gave me my copy, and I even have my mother鈥檚 copy as well,鈥 she says.)

Samantha  Seiple

Seiple has long revered Alcott as a storyteller, an abolitionist and as a fiercely independent woman who defied 19th century expectations about just what a little lady should and could do. Needlework 鈥 fine! Nursing amputees 鈥 well, that鈥檚 no work for the fairer sex. 鈥淪he was considered unconventional in her day,鈥 Seiple says, 鈥渂ut we would consider her mainstream today. She is a modern woman, but she [lived] in the 19th century.鈥

Until she began working on 鈥淟incoln鈥檚 Spymaster,鈥 her book about the country鈥檚 first private investigator, Seiple thought Alcott鈥檚 story had been told conclusively. But deep into her research, she learned about Alcott鈥檚 nursing experience and discovered how rare it was for a young, unmarried woman to serve at bedside, much less in a war zone.听听

The book chronicles the many ways in which Alcott lived her values. She tended to the dying, emptied bedpans, assisted doctors during horrifying procedures and wrote letters for soldiers too maimed and sick to pen their own correspondence. All along, she never relinquished her beliefs about the equality of all human beings, regardless of skin color, ethnicity or gender.

鈥淚 really thought she is a great role model, especially for today, because we鈥檙e dealing with the same issues: equal pay, equal rights, equal opportunity. And here she was fighting on the frontlines. She was always pushing the boundaries. She did it through one of the only opportunities she had: through her writing and her work. She did reach people and continues to reach people even today,鈥 Seiple says.

Seiple traces her origins as a writer to her years at 快活app, where she majored in mass communications and English and wrote for The Clarion. (Her first published piece was a movie review of 鈥淟ess Than Zero.鈥) An internship with the Denver Post gave her much-valued clips for a portfolio that helped her land her first job in publishing with Academic Press. 鈥淚 was a production editor and learned all the ins and outs of book production 鈥 copyediting and grammar,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚t gave me a really good foundation.鈥

Next, she earned a degree in library and information science from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, which paved the way for a stint as a competitive intelligence specialist in the corporate world. That job, in which she gathered information on markets and competitors, honed the skills she uses today. 鈥淭hat really helped me to understand 鈥 how to dig for information 鈥 which, it turned out I really enjoy doing.鈥

Based in Asheville, North Carolina, Seiple is never happier than when she鈥檚 digging. The months between books are spent pondering which topic to pursue next. And once she starts writing, the stories command her full attention.

鈥淚t seems sort of mysterious,鈥 she says of the writing process, 鈥渂ut it really is what they say: 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.鈥