About
With a name like that, don't you have to be a writer?
Judalon discovered her passion for history when she was ten. She opened her great-grandfather’s old hump-backed trunk and found a law book and a Texas history from the 1850s. It was love. That same year, she discovered her passion for writing. Her grandmother introduced her to a Bronte family biography that described Charlotte and her siblings creating tiny books written in miniscule script. Dozens of miniature Bronte-esque creations followed.
Where did her name originate? With THE IRON MISTRESS, a book by Paul Wellman made into a 1952 film starring Alan Ladd and Virginia Mayo. The not-so-loveable love interest of Alamo hero Jim Bowie, Judalon de Bornay had a name that captivated about a dozen or so daring young romantics, like her parents, during the baby boom. There’s a street named Judalon in her home town of Houston, Texas.
As a teenager, Judalon heard a number of people suggest she become a writer. Uncle Gene, her best friend Penny’s father, and her math teacher stand out because she admired them. “With a name like that, don’t you have to be?”
Judalon learned about Julia and Richard while developing a unit on US vice-presidents for her advanced history students. “Someone should make this into a novel!” she told her husband, author Christopher Manes. “That someone should be you,” he suggested. This work is dedicated to him.