Parents Bloggers
Amy Whitley
Amy Whitley is the creator of the personal memoir and essay blog The Never-True Tales, where she writes about being the mother of three boys, working as a 30-something woman in suburban America, and engaging in the particular torture that is pursuing a literary career (when she's not writing about her most embarrassing moments and her shameful Twilight phase, which come to think of it, are one and the same). One of BlogHer's 2011 Voices of the Year in the Perspectives category, Amy seeks discovery of self and exposure of societal truths in her writing, preferring to keep her children off her blog's center-stage (if not out of the spotlight altogether). A freelance family travel writer with a degree in creative writing and bylines in both print and online publications, Amy also administrates the travel review site Pit Stops for Kids, where her kids enjoy a bit more screen time as family travel guinea pigs. She's also been known to occasionally publish poetry in literary journals, but doesn't recommend it as a get rich quick scheme.
Amy Whitley
Amy Whitley is the creator of the personal memoir and essay blog The Never-True Tales, where she writes about being the mother of three boys, working as a 30-something woman in suburban America, and engaging in the particular torture that is pursuing a literary career (when she's not writing about her most embarrassing moments and her shameful Twilight phase, which come to think of it, are one and the same). One of BlogHer's 2011 Voices of the Year in the Perspectives category, Amy seeks discovery of self and exposure of societal truths in her writing, preferring to keep her children off her blog's center-stage (if not out of the spotlight altogether). A freelance family travel writer with a degree in creative writing and bylines in both print and online publications, Amy also administrates the travel review site Pit Stops for Kids, where her kids enjoy a bit more screen time as family travel guinea pigs. She's also been known to occasionally publish poetry in literary journals, but doesn't recommend it as a get rich quick scheme.