From 1989 until 1994, Austin taught workshops about
fiction at
Columbia University and at the Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center. A member of the
Harlem Writers Guild (originally established in 1950), she went on to co-found The New Renaissance Guild, which was inspired by writers groups during the
Harlem Renaissance, others involved including
Arthur Flowers,
Terry McMillan, Malaika Adero, Joyce Dukes, Brenda Conner Bey and B. J. Ashanti. For a time Austin was a reporter for
NBC Radio. Her work has been published in
Essence,
Amsterdam News, and
The New York Times. Austin wrote one novel,
After the Garden (1987), which has been characterized as "one of the narratives in African American literature that dramatizes the class conflicts and disparate value systems found within the African American community." The novel draws inspiration from people who attended the Baptist church that Austin went to when young, and is about "idealism and tainted relationships". Her short story, "Heirs and Orphans," is based on a character in
After the Garden, and was featured in the
anthology Black Southern Voices. She had additional short stories appear in
Street Lights: Illuminating Tales of the Urban Black Experience, which she co-edited. ==Legacy==