Mary King (1956) was born in Jacksonville, Florida, the youngest of three children. She attended local public schools during the 60s and early 70s, and is a graduate of Jacksonville University (BS Psychology). She has an extensive background in music, having performed as a concert violinist and a church organist. At one time, she was a professional driver. She has worked in two physical rehabilitation settings, both of which contributed to her current writing career. While working in rehab, she developed the first state licensed driving school for persons with spinal cord injury, limb amputation, and other profound physical disabilities. Mary King married in 1983; her husband and she settled in Jacksonville until 1992, when they moved near Pensacola, Florida. She has five grown children, three of whom are diagnosed with intellectual and developmental delays. Mary had an interest in writing at an early age, demonstrating a particular fondness and skill for English composition and health classes. By the time she was thirty, work and raising a family occupied center stage. It wasn’t until a year after her husband’s sudden death that she began to write. She found it to be good therapy to alleviate grief and depression. "I’d been building the story scenes for years, even before I knew what physiotherapy was. When I began writing on that summer day in 1997, I filled five spiral notebooks within two weeks." She wrote and self published a few books, but the first drafts, she claims, were too sappy and too wordy. To gain a better understanding of how she should develop her main characters, Mary became a full-time caregiver for two friends-both quadriplegic-one with a spinal cord injury and the other with spinal muscular atrophy. As a result of hands-on care giving and endless hours of research, her manuscripts evolved into The McFadden Series she continues to write today. Through the years, Mary has continued her love of classical and classic rock music. Other hobbies include reading, medical research, cooking and gardening. She loves reality television shows, particularly medical programs. Mary King’s novels have a genuine authenticity readers recognize. The majority of her work focuses on teenagers with disabilities, homeless young adults, adopting older children-primarily victims of abuse and domestic violence-and physical rehabilitation.