About Christine
There are three points of view from which a writer can be considered:
he may be considered as a story teller, as a teacher, and as an
enchanter. A major writer combines these three — Vladimir Nabokov
Christine Marie Tetreault has been polishing and practicing her professional writing craft for more than 20 years. She is a savvy writer, editor, researcher, and interviewer, versatile enough to mingle with corporate executives, rockclimbers, special needs educators, or Sotheby art collectors.
To her technical/business writing work, she brings exceptional management expertise from senior manager and contract roles in operations, support, training, and vendor management for Boston area technology firms, including The MathWorks, ProfitLogic/Oracle, Invensys, and Fidelity. Her industry experience spans software development, retail, financial, manufacturing, pharmaceutical, health/fitness, and security authentication.
Christine believes that the most effective writers are also skilled communicators and adventurous life observers, extroverts who enjoy people, but who also aren't shy about tossing tough questions (politely) into comfortable conversation. Christine taught journalism at Boston College and has presented at many area corporate and health conferences. If you follow community theater, you may have seen her on stage in Needham or Winchester as a Neil Simon female lead. Christine also holds a Lesley University graduate certificate in psychology/counseling, education she credits for helping to expand her literary insight into human nature.
Christine was staff writer/editor for several newspapers and magazines, including The Middlesex News, Boston Magazine, SportScape, and New Age Journal. Her feature, travel, news, lifestyle, and adventure writing has been published in Esquire, Women's Sports, New England Monthly, Boston Globe, and Boston Business Journal. She is a regular online contributor to Associated Content and is currently writing a book about parenting her daughter through severe post-traumatic stress and eating disorder recovery.