Monica Wood has written four books (three novels and one collection of short stories), but it wasn’t until 2011 that she decided to write a nonfiction piece about one of the people nearest and dearest to her — her sister, Betty Wood.

The Mexico, Maine-based writer composed an essay about Betty, who is mentally disabled, which was published in the November issue of O: The Oprah Magazine. “What My Sister Taught Me” is a funny, deeply moving story about sisters, and the things that people of all levels of mental capability have to teach us about love, loss and friendship.

“Betty is a magical person, easy to write about,” said Wood. “Everything she says is either hilarious or knee-drop poignant. And there you have it.”

Wood said the process of working with O, Oprah Winfrey’s magazine, was painless and, in fact, quite enjoyable, and that the feedback she has received from readers has been very nearly overwhelming.

“I [got a] shocking amount of mail, from complete strangers. I plan to read all the letters to Betty over Thanksgiving,” said Wood. “I’m very thankful to have been able to introduce Betty to many thousands of people — more than that, probably. I think the magazine circulation is something like two million plus.”

Wood is the author of the novels “Secret Language,” “My Only Story” and “Any Bitter Thing,” as well as the short story collection “Ernie’s Ark.” Her books have received widespread praise from the likes of National Public Radio, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Washington Post, Booklist, the Boston Globe, the Maine Sunday Telegram and writers such as Richard Russo and Andre Dubus III.

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Her next book, “When We Were the Kennedys: A Memoir from Mexico, Maine,” is due out next July from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and takes place in 1963, when Wood was 9 years old.

“In that year, my father, a papermaker, suddenly died; the Oxford Paper Company was preparing for its first protracted labor strike; and President Kennedy was assassinated,” said Wood. “These three events directly affected my family, and that’s what the story is about: a family, a town, and a country enduring connected instances of shock and transition.”

Like “What My Sister Called Me,” “When We Were the Kennedys” is an autobiographical novel, her first foray into nonfiction. Wood said it was a joy to write.

“Until this book I was pretty allergic to writing about my ‘real’ life. The impetus came from Wes McNair, Maine’s poet laureate, who asked me to do an essay about Mexico for his anthology ‘A Place Called Maine,’” she said. “To my great surprise, I enjoyed writing about my family. This surprise engendered other surprises — I’m with a new publisher and editor. So here I am, a writer in my fifties, feeling like a shiny new beginner.”

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