
Martha Woodroof
Retired Host of The SparkMarth Woodroof has retired from WMRA and is now spending her time as a full-time writer and published author.
Martha is both a college dropout (Mount Holyoke) and a graduate school dropout (the University of Virginia).
Her first real job was as a teacher’s aide in a pilot Head Start program in Greensboro, North Carolina. She's been with WMRA since the (latest) turn of the century, and has actively freelanced for the NPR Culture Desk and for npr.org.
Before that – among a lot of other things - she co-owned restaurants, did a bit of acting, was fired as a magazine editor, hosted local TV talk shows and anchored the news, wrote a book called How to Stop Screwing Up: 12 Steps to a Real Life and a Pretty Good Time, cooked for an artist’s colony, was a country music disc jockey and a psychiatric occupational therapy aide, taught preschool, published a bunch of essays, was a morning drive-time personality on a tiny AM radio station, ran a college bookstore coffee shop, directed a college’s co-curricular programming, and failed to sell cars. Many of the photographs accompanying her work were taken by her husband, Charlie.
She loves words and their power to tell other people’s stories.
Her daughter is spinner, weaver, author, and content provider, Liz Gipson.
Her first novel, Small Blessings, was published by St. Martin’s Press in the summer of 2014.
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On this episode of The Spark: Author, lawyer, and new Charlottesville mayor, Michael Signer... does a lot. This week on the Spark he talks with Martha…
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On this episode of The Spark: Even the Friendly City of Harrisonburg has an underbelly of street rage... so how do you pursue conflict mediation when…
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On this episode of The Spark: For almost forty years, British-born Clare Senfield has been the doyen of Allegheny Kennels where she breeds and trains and…
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On this edition of The Spark: Washington Post Reporter Will Hobson just published a five-part series addressing this question: Why do so many of the Power…
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On this episode of The Spark: Seven years ago Vaudevillian Carmel Clavin decided she wanted to make Staunton, Virginia, her home. And since it wouldn't…
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On this episode of The Spark: Lawyer Nancy Lasater wrote a novel about a farm boy with dyslexia. When agents told her nobody would buy a book about…
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On this episode of The Spark: New Market’s Pat Murphy survived a truly horrible childhood that left her emotionally scarred in a number of ways. Including…
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Barclay Rives describes his family as being on a riches to rags trajectory —he’s directly descended from politicians and landowners who were part and…
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On this episode of The Spark: Two-time state banjo champion Seth Swingle. He was ten when he fell in love with the sound of the banjo at MerleFest. Now at…
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Martha speaks with Sophia Weideman, who has been drawing cartoons her whole life, but it took a while for her to find her own superheroes.NOTE: This…