At the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, Lowry returned to the United States to attend a small, private high school in New York City. She graduated from high school in a class of close to fifty students. The caption under her senior picture in the school yearbook reads, "Future Novelist." The following fall, Lowry entered Pembroke College, a branch of Brown University, in Rhode Island, to pursue her childhood dream of becoming a writer. She completed her sophomore year of college, and then, at the age of nineteen, she did what so many other women did during the 1950s: She set her studies aside to get married. Because her husband, Donald Lowry, was a naval officer, Lowry resumed a military lifestyle that included traveling and living wherever her husband was stationed. She and her husband lived in California, Connecticut, Florida, and South Carolina, and when her husband left the service to attend Harvard Law School, they moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts. After her husband finished law school, the Lowry family, which now included four children, settled in Portland, Maine. Lowry eventually received a bachelor's degree in 1972 from the University of Southern Maine and then immediately began work on a master's degree.
While attending graduate school, Lowry established herself as an accomplished freelance journalist. She began writing stories and articles that appeared in publications such as Redbook, Yankee, and Down East, as well as in newspapers. She also edited two text-books — Black American Literature (1973) and Literature of the American Revolution (1974), both written by J. Weston Walsh — and became a photographer, specializing in photographs of children. In 1978, a collection of her photographs of buildings and houses was published in a book titled Here at Kennebunkport.


















