Meet the Author
Joyce A. Miller is an author based in the Church Hill section of Richmond, VA. She has written and indie-published two books: Joe Harris, the Moon, is historical fiction based on the true story of Miller’s granduncle, who played baseball in the 1910s/1920s, and Look! You’re Dancing: A Memoir of Dogs, Dance and Devotion, a memoir of Miller’s adoption journey of six greyhounds. Miller is an active member of James River Writers and the Church Hill Book Club. Before she started writing, Miller worked for over thirty years as a mechanical designer at a nuclear physics laboratory.
Details
Formats: Paperback, E-book
ISBN Paperback: 978-1-966369-40-0
ISBN E-book: 978-1-966369-41-7
Pages: 169
Release date: 1/6/2026
Endorsements
“Mrs. Gari Melchers follows Corinne Melchers’ steadfast journey for recognition in a society that expects women to stay in the background. From art school critiques to the unforgiving Paris Salon, and a life with renowned painter Gari Melchers in Holland, Corinne must reconcile her identity as an artist, a wife, and a woman fighting to be seen. She builds a creative life alongside, and sometimes despite, a husband who loves her dearly but struggles to understand her yearnings, despite being an artist himself. Joyce Miller’s beautifully crafted historical novel is a nuanced, heartfelt exploration of ambition, marriage, and the quest for artistic freedom in an era in which women’s voices often were not heard. Miller offers a moving portrait of resilience, quiet defiance, and creative hunger.”
—Gigi Howard, host of the podcast Drinks in the Library
“For lovers of art and Virginian history, Joyce Miller’s Mrs. Gari Melchers offers a glimpse into a world gone by. Grounded in period and technical detail, the opening scenes transport the reader into the early twentieth-century life of Corinne Mackall, an artist who struggles to find her place amid shifting feminist expectations, the fetters of Depression-era societal norms, and the turmoil of two world wars. In Corinne, Miller has unearthed a figure often relegated to the footnotes of art history . . . but who is clearly worth getting to know in her own right.”
—Joanna Lee, Poet Laureate of Richmond, Virginia, and author of Dissections