If you want the whole story,

we'll have to play 19...

My mother swears my writing career began when I was about 2 and couldn't keep my hands off books. Since then, I've put a pen to everything from college entry essays for friends to technical abstracts to sports copy for a toy in production. A personal highlight was a proclamation declaring a friend's birthday "Dishonorable Derelict Day," written on a brown bag that had formerly held a six-pack.

Oh, and I wrote a lot of newspaper and magazine articles, starting in high school, where I edited the Patterson Press, and college, where I was sports editor of the University of Maryland's daily Diamondback.

In the locker room

I wanted to be Woodward or Bernstein, but so did every other budding writer -- journalism school enrollment was at an all-time high. Having been a sports nut since my dad took me out to Memorial Stadium to watch Johnny Unitas in the rain and snow, I decided to join the wave of women sportswriters, and went to work at the Baltimore News American right out of college. After three years there, I joined the original staff at USA Today, serving duty on the sports copy desk and then covering soccer and general assignment sports and sports features until 1985.

Heading west

That's when I discovered California and started looking west for a new job. The Sacramento Bee hired me to cover the Oakland A's, who went from terrible to terrific during my years on the beat. In 1986 I became known as "The Rat Lady" after a player sent me a gift-wrapped rat to bring attention to what he considered to be the injustice of women entering the clubhouse; that backfired, ultimately costing him his job and motivating me to join three other women sportswriters in forming the Association for Women in Sports Media in 1987. The baseball writing experience inspired me to write a memoir called "Lady in the Locker Room," which was published in 1993 and received great reviews (though not great royalties).

More variety

I left the Bee in 1992 and freelanced for magazines and corporate clients. There was an exciting stint in media relations for World Cup Soccer 1994 at Stanford, and then a return to the newspaper business and a 15-year journey through a delightful variety of jobs at the San Francisco Examiner and then Chronicle. These included news copy desk editor, sports copy desk editor, golf writer, real estate section staffer, features copy editor, home-and-garden reporter, general feature writer, and, finally, travel editor. I moonlighted for two years to complete work on a paralegal certificate at S.F. State in 2005. I also wrote a second book, "Northern California Golf Getaways," with Cori Kenicer (now Brett) – again, great reviews, not so great royalties.

A fresh start

In 2009 I left the Chronicle and moved to Oakland, California, to pursue new opportunities in the endlessly interesting world of writing. Within a year, I had launched “GottaGoGolf,” the online magazine for women who love the game (and who miss “Golf For Women” magazine). The magazine premiered Oct. 1, 2010, and went monthly on Feb. 1, 2011.

Following a March 2012 edition of the magazine, a new website was launched at www.gottagogolfmag.com to build the brand and grow traffic for a renewed publishing cycle when funding allows. The magazine’s more than 4,000 subscribers receive monthly email newsletters and keep in touch on the Facebook page.

Currently I write for clients including Golden Gate University and The Institutional Real Estate Letter as I complete my next book, “Confessions of a Golf Slut.” This book -- a memoir about the amazing gifts I have received, not because I am good at golf but just because I play -- is the one that's going to make every woman want to take up the game.

Here’s my resume.

Susan Fornoff, writer, editor, publisher, women's golf consultant.

Education: University of Maryland B.S., S.F. State paralegal certificate.

Websites: GottaGoGolf, GottaGoGolfMag, Flogton, InToTally.

Newspapers: Baltimore News American, USA Today, Sacramento Bee, San Francisco Examiner/Chronicle.

Magazines: GottaGoGolf, GGU Magazine (Golden Gate University alumni), The Institutional Real Estate Letter, Troon Golf & Travel (as the Golf Goddess), American Lifestyle, Fairways + Greens, California (UC-Berkeley’s alumni quarterly), Golf, Diablo, San Francisco, others.

Books: "Lady in the Locker Room," "Northern California Golf Getaways," "Confessions of a Golf Slut" (coming in 2013).

PR Clients: Alternative Golf Association, Amateurgolf.com, My Seat Finder, Four Under Golf, Pedro’s Cantina, Yardshare.