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Joanne’s Characters are Human

Joanne Greenberg is most well-known for her book “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden,” but she has written many more books, though not as well known, are excellent reads! When I read, I like to feel for the characters, get inside their heads; be eager to know what they will do/think next. Joanne’s characters are human, flawed, and somehow even the most flawed I feel such compassion for, even though they sometimes break my heart.

Joanne's Characters are Human
A close up of two friends

The first of her more recent books I discovered was Miri Who Charms, which I finished in two days and then passed on to my Mom. She also labored under the impression that Joanne never beat Rose Garden.  Mom agreed with one reviewer who stated that Joanne “writes like a house on fire.” We shared and discussed more of her books.

Next, I perused her WEB page and decided to try Appearances. Powerful stuff! I suggest you read what it is about first. It’s a challenging subject, but her characters work through it. Appearances is a haunting and beautifully written novel, and it, perhaps more than any other title of hers, supports my thesis that Joanne’s characters are human.

At this point, it was clear to me that I wanted to read as many of Joanne Greenberg’s books as possible. I ordered and read Age of Consent, In This Sign, and The Monday Voices.

Some time passed before I looked up Joanne Greenberg again on Amazon, and I found she had written yet another book, “All I’ve Done for You.” Like the others, it haunted me. In This Sign was a hard read for me, and I’m not sure why. However, I finished it and enjoyed it thoroughly.

Joanne's Characters are Human
A Collector’s Edition

A few months ago, I came across an interview with Joanne on the Internet, and I was happy to see that she had written more books, which I ordered and read in quick succession. Jubilee Year was extraordinary, followed by On the Run, then a used hardback copy of With the Snow Queen, which captivated me even though I’m not much of a short story reader. I prefer to be swept up in novels. Again, Joanne’s characters are human.

I would love to see more of her books reissued and back in print, read in schools, book clubs, etc. I have read Joanne’s work at various stages of my life: as a teen, through middle age, and now as a young senior. I hope you read this and are inspired to discover more of her work.

A Lifetime of Writing

Joanne Greenberg published her first book, The King’s Persons, in 1963. It won the Harry and Ethel Daroff Memorial Fiction Award and the Jewish Book Council of America award. Since then, she has produced a lifetime of writing. Most known for the psychological novel I Never Promised You a Rose Garden, She went on to finish fifteen novels, four short story collections, and most recently, a memoir of her time serving on a mountain fire and rescue team–On the Run. Among the Deaf community in America, Ms. Greenberg is known for the groundbreaking In This Sign, which is being reprinted soon in a special commemorative version by Penguin Books.

Gallery, About Me, A Lifetime of Writing
AUG 8, 1977 Writers Discuss Their Metro State College Gathering; From left are Allen Ginsberg, Joanne Greenberg and John Williams. (Photo By Ernie Leyba/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

The King’s Persons

What caused the massacre of the Jews in York in 1190? King Richard was away at the Crusades. Who was left in charge?

1963

I Never Promised You a Rose Garden

A semi-autobiographical novel of my three-year hospitalization for schizophrenia, beginning my recovery, with good people and a fine therapist.

1964

The Monday Voices

This follows a skilled vocational rehabilitation counselor through several of his cases. I don’t think anyone has ever written a novel on this subject.

1965

Summering

A Collection of Short Stories

1966

In This Sign

Deaf couple, Janice and Abel, and their hearing daughter, Margret, live many experiences. Hallmark used it for Love is Never Silent

1970

Rites of Passage

A collection of short stories

1972

Founder’s Praise

My salute to the communes of the 1960s and ’70s with their premises of all love and no law. I invent a new religion and see where it goes.

1976

High Crimes & Misdemeanors

A collection of short stories

1979

A Season of Delight

A woman firefighter wonders what to do with the love left over, after her kids are grown. She contemplates a romance.

1981

The Far Side of Victory

What happens to someone who gets off scot-free? Is there punishment besides the law?

1983

What I see when I look out my window. (Photo BitcoDavid)

Simple Gifts

My comic novel about a government plan to re-imagine ranch life in the Colorado 1800s.

1986

Age of Consent

Was he a hero? He was unable to love, but he was a good man. Can that be?

A Lifetime of Writing

1987

Of Such Small Differences

Romance between a Deaf/Blind man who writes for Handi-cards and a hearing woman.

1988

With the Snow Queen

A collection of short stories

1991

No Reck’ning Made

The life of a teacher in a mountain town. Is she out of her depth or confronted by modern fads?

1993

Where the Road Goes

An epistolary novel about a walk across the U.S. and of one family, left behind.

1998

A founding member of Congregation Beth Evergreen, Joanne brings home the Torah

Appearances

If his father is dead, why is there no record, no memories except him riding that motorcycle?

2006

Miri, who Charms

What are the limits of charm? One woman has it, one doesn’t. A friendship is tested.

2009

All I’ve Done for You

Why is the main character a suicide? There was money involved. Where did it go?

2017

Jubilee Year

A town cut off without any modern conveniences. Does it improve their lives?

2019

On the Run

A memoir of 13 years as a woman in fire/Rescue, in a mountain community.

2023

A fire near a strip mall in Golden, Colorado circa 1982

At ninety-two, Joanne Greenberg isn’t done yet. She’s got one in the can and is still working on another. Check back often to learn more about what’s coming. It’s been a lifetime of writing