![]() She published her second original novel "So Long, Daddy" in 1985. She wrote novelizations (including Saturday Night Fever) and children's books (including Muppets books) while working full-time at Bantam and raising a child on her own. Her first novel "The Trade", a trashy paperback about the publishing business, was published in 1969. ![]() She had a child, Jessica, with him in 1970. She was married to Bruce Gilmour in 1968. ![]() In 1964 she joined Bantam Books where she worked as copywriter, editor, and copy chief and as an associate director of marketing. Gilmour’s first publishing job was at E.P. She attended college there and then moved back to New York City. As a teenager, she moved to Florida to live with her father. ![]() She grew up in Williamsburg, Brooklyn with her mother and the extended family and fondly remembered writing her very first poem for Arbor Day when she was just eight years old. Gilmour was a bestselling author of children's books. ![]()
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