By Published: Oct. 6, 2021

CU Ā鶹¹ŁĶų staffer and alum embraces avocation as a writer in later life.


Cynthia Clarkā€™s first novel circled endlessly in her head for a couple of decades before she finally decided it was time to set it free.

ā€œWhen I got the guts to sit down and write it, I discovered that I was visualizing it like a movie. While typing I could see characters blink their eyes, turn their heads or reach down,ā€ says Clark, education program assistant in the Department of Linguistics at her alma mater, the Ā鶹¹ŁĶų.

Cynthia Clark

Cynthia Clark,Ģżeducation program assistant in the Department of Linguistics and an author, recently publishedĢżĢż(cover at top).

Clark (Econā€™82; Lawā€™85) self-published that long-pent-up romantic-suspense novel, , with Parker-based Outskirts Press in December 2019. Set in the shadow of Ā鶹¹ŁĶųā€™s iconic Flatirons, it tells the story of recently divorced Lana Ross, who hires an old high-school acquaintance, Leon, to help her change the locks and set up a security system, only to discover that he has long had an unhealthy, dangerous obsession with her. When Lana begins traveling around Colorado with her new, Harley-Davidson riding companion, Vincent ā€œRoadkingā€ Romano, Leonā€™s jealousy pushes him toward violence.

A year later, Clark published her second novel, , which turns on a road romance between rock musician Tano and a hitchhiker named Holly.

ā€œIā€™m really a music fan, especially of classic rock from the ā€˜60s and ā€˜70s,ā€ Clark says, citing the Eagles, former Coloradan Joe Walsh and Barnstorm and Firefall, the most successful band to emerge from the Ā鶹¹ŁĶų music scene.

ā€œSo, a music thread runs through both my novels. At the end of the first novel, the main character saysā€”much like meā€”that her life has been accompanied by a soundtrack, and all the way through the book, songs pop up.ā€

And in July, she published her first childrenā€™s book, , with help from the online company Blueberry Illustrations. A true story, the book tells the story of a cat who decided to hitch a ride with the Clark family from their rural property in Hygiene to town one day. When they emerged from a restaurant, they were surprised to see him twitching his tail while patiently awaiting their return on the hood of their pickup truck.

ā€œThe story really happened. Max had tried to go into town with us way more than twice,ā€ she says. ā€œPeople say that cats hate going in the car; well, this one didnā€™t!ā€

In contrast to the long-gestating first novelā€”which took three years to writeā€”and secondā€”one and a half yearsā€”Clark wrote Maxā€™s, in verse, in just a half an hour.

ā€œMax was kind of a fill-in after I wrote the second novel and started the sequel to the first, which Iā€™ve just finished,ā€ she says. ā€œBut I decided I really love doing childrenā€™s books, too.ā€

She is now preparing her second kidsā€™ book, Wilbur and the Watering Can, another true story, this time with a toad in the starring role. In addition, the sequel to her first novel is in the editing process, sheā€™s begun writing a sequel to the second, and ideas for kidsā€™ books are constantly percolating in her mind.

ā€œWhile Iā€™m driving, Iā€™m always thinking, ā€˜What if this happened, or that happened,ā€™ā€ she says. ā€œI love, love writing and canā€™t seem to quit. I never have writerā€™s block. I only regret not taking a chance on it 10 or 15 years earlier.ā€

Clark's Book Covers

Clark has also published two adult novels:ĢżĢż(left) and (right).

Clark made a conscious decision to pursue self-publishing rather than go through the long and sometimes arduous process of trying to find a traditional publisher. She relies on Amber Byers of Lafayette-based for copy editing, to ensure that her books reach the reading audience in the best possible shape.

ā€œI just wanted the story to be told. I didnā€™t want to mess around, waiting for six months to hear ā€˜yes,ā€™ ā€˜noā€™ or nothing at all,ā€ she says. ā€œPublishers are really taking a chance on novice authors, and reluctant to risk the cost of a print book. If Iā€™d gone that way, I could still be waiting on that first novel, and I wouldnā€™t have written the second, or Max.ā€

Clark is a life-long resident of Ā鶹¹ŁĶų County and fourth-generation Coloradan. She graduated from Longmont High School and later earned a BA in economics and JD degree from CU Ā鶹¹ŁĶų. She practiced law before retiring to raise a family in Hygieneā€”where her husband grew up.

She returned to work on campus in 2007, after attending a talk at Wolf Law by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer a few months before.

ā€œI remembered how much I like (campus) and realized that I wanted to come back,ā€ she says.

Now, being on campus continually inspires her writing.

ā€œI love being back at CU and seeing the Flatirons through the window every single day. It felt like home to come back here,ā€ she says. ā€œAnd I feed off the energy of students. I think my novels have a youthful bent to them; (students) inspire and influence my writing.ā€