Walter Dean Myers: Difference between revisions
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| name = Walter Dean Myers |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1937|8|12}} |
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| birth_place = [[Martinsburg, West Virginia]], [[United States|U.S.A.]] |
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| occupation = [[novelist]], nonfiction writer, [[poet]] |
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| genre = [[Young adult literature]] |
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| influenced = [[Sharon Creech]] |
| influenced = [[Sharon Creech]] |
Revision as of 15:04, 8 December 2011
Walter Dean Myers | |
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http://www.walterdeanmyers.net |
Walter Dean Myers (born Walter Milton Myers, August 12, 1937, Martinsburg, West Virginia) is an African American author of young adult literature. Myers has written over fifty books, including novels and nonfiction works. He has won the Coretta Scott King Award for African American authors five times. One of his novels, Fallen Angels, has made the American Library Association's list of frequently challenged books, due to adult language and its realistic depiction of the Vietnam War.
Awards
Myers was the first winner of the Michael L. Printz Award, for Monster.[1][2] He won the Margaret Edwards Award in 1994.[3]
Where Does the Day Go? Council on Interracial Books for Children Award, 1968 .[4]
ALA Best Books for Young Adults, 1993.[4]
Myers is a three-time finalist for the National Book Award. He was nominated in 1999 for Monster and in 2005 for Autobiography of My Dead Brother. He is a 2010 finalist for Lockdown.[2]
ALA list of banned books
Fallen Angels, New York: Scholastic. Challenged in Ohio schools (1990) because of profane language.[4]
Fast Sam, Cool Clyde and Stuff. New York: Viking, 1975. Challenged by school administrator (1983) in Ohio.[4]
Hoops. New York: Dell. Challenged in Colorado (1989) school libraries.[4]
Personal life
When his mother died, while giving birth to his little brother, Myers was given over as a child to Herbert Dean and his wife, who raised him in Harlem, New York. Myers later took on "Dean" as his middle name in honor of his foster parents.[5] Herbert was an African American man and his wife was part German and Native American, who taught English at the local high school. As a child his life centered around the neighborhood and the church. The neighborhood protected him and the church guided him. Walter was smart, but didn't do that well in school.[6] Suffering with a speech impediment, he cultivated a habit of writing poetry and short stories and acquired an early love of reading.[4] Myers dropped out of high school(although now Stuyvesant High claims him as a graduate) and joined the army on his 17th birthday.[7] Walter wrote well in high school and one of his teachers recognized this, She also knew he was going to drop out. She advised him to keep on writing no matter what happened. He didn't exactly understand what that meant but, years later, while working on a construction job in New York, he remembered her words.[5] [6] Myers would write at night, soon writing about his difficult teenage years. When asked what he valued most, he replied, "My books. They were my only real friend growing up."
Myers lives in Jersey City, New Jersey with his family.[2]
Partial bibliography
- Where Does the Night Go?, illustrated by Leo Carty. (Parents Magazine Press, 1969)
- The Dancers, illustrated by Anne Rockwell (Parents Magazine Press, 1972)
- The Dragon Takes a Wife, illustrated by Ann Grifalconi (Bobbs-Merrill, 1972)
- Fly, Jimmy, Fly!, illustrated by Moneta Barnett (Putnam, 1974)
- Fast Sam, Cool Clyde, and Stuff (Viking, 1975)
- Social Welfare (Franklin Watts, 1976)
- Victory for Jamie (Scholastic, 1977)
- Mojo and the Russians (Viking, 1977)
- Brainstorm, illustrated with photographs by Chuck Freedman (Franklin Watts, 1977)
- It Ain't All for Nothin' (V, 1978)
- The Young Landlords (Viking, 1979) - A group of kids take over an apartment building and struggle to maintain it
- The Golden Serpent, illustrated by Alice and Martin Provensen (Viking, 1980)
- The Black Pearl and the Ghost; or, One Mystery after Another, illustrated by Robert Quackenbush (Viking, 1980)
- The Legend of Tarik (Viking, 1981)
- Hoops (Delacorte, 1981) - A promising basketball player tries not to end up like his former pro-playing coach
- Won't Know Till I Get There (Viking, 1982) - A 14-year-old boy, his newly adopted brother, and his friends are forced to work in a retirement home
- Tales of a Dead King (William Morrow, 1983)
- The Nicholas Factor (Viking, 1983)
- Motown and Didi: A Love Story (Viking, 1984) - A young couple's romance, and their struggle living in Harlem
- Mr. Monkey and the Gotcha Bird, illustrated by Leslie Morrill (Delacorte, 1984)
- The Outside Shot (Delacorte, 1984) - A talented Harlem basketball player goes to college to play
- Crystal (1987) - The life of a girl who becomes a model.
- Fallen Angels (1988) - Young men in the army during the Vietnam war
- Scorpions (1990) - a 12-year-old is asked to lead his brother's gang
- The Mouse Rap (1990) - A 14-year-old is determined to find the loot from a 1930s bank heist.
- Now Is Your Time! The African-American Struggle for Freedom (1992)
- The Righteous Revenge of Artemis Bonner (1994) - a 12-year-old boy goes after a man that murdered his uncle.
- Darnell Rock Reporting (1994) - A 13 year old boy joins the school newspaper.
- The Glory Field (1994) - A family's account of their struggle in America from the 18th century to the 1990s.
- Shadow of the Red Moon (1995)
- Slam (1998) - A young black teen with an attitude problem deals with life on and off the basketball court.
- Monster (1999) A 16-year-old black boy is charged with murder.
- 145th Street: Short Stories (2001)
- Greatest: Muhammad Ali (2001)
- Bad Boy; A Memoir (2002) (a part of the Amistad Series) - Myers' life as a young boy growing up in 1940s Harlem
- Handbook for Boys: A Novel (2003)
- Somewhere in the Darkness (2003) - A young boy travels to Arkansas with a father he didn't grow up with
- Thanks & Giving: All year long (2004)
- Shooter (2004) - two friends of a school shooter give an account of him to the police
- The Beast (2003) - A 17-year-old boy comes back to his home in Harlem from his boarding school to find that the girl he loves is using drugs.
- Autobiography of My Dead Brother (2005) - A 14-year-old boy copes with life in Harlem by drawing
- Street Love (2006) - A poetic novel of a romance in Harlem
- What They Found: Love on 145th Street (2007)
- Harlem Summer (2007)
- Game (2008)
- Sunrise Over Fallujah (2008) - A sequel to Fallen Angels, taking place in the Iraq War.
- Dopesick (2009) - A teenager kills a policeman, and must contemplate his future
- Riot (2009) A fictional account of the New York Draft Riots in 1863, during the Civil War, by the 15-year-old daughter of a black man and an Irish immigrant.
- Amiri & Odette (2009) Myers takes classic Swan Lake ballet and recasts it into hip-hop verse.
- Lockdown (2010)
Influence
Myers is mentioned in Sharon Creech's 2001 poetic novella Love That Dog, in which a young boy admires Myers and invites him to visit his class.
References
- ^ "2000 Winner". Young Adult Library Services Association. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ a b c "2010 National Book Award Finalist, Young People's Literature: Walter Dean Myers". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ "1994 Margaret A. Edwards Award Winner". Young Adult Library Services Association. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ a b c d e f "Learning About Walter Dean Myers".
- ^ a b "Meet the Author: Walter Dean Myers". Houghton Mifflin Reading. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ a b "Biography".
- ^ Novak, Terry (24 January 2002). "Walter Dean Myers". The Literary Encyclopedia. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
External links
- Official website
- Houghton-Miffin: Meet Walter Dean Myers
- Public School Insights interview with Walter Dean Myers Posted January 31, 2009. Dean discusses his book "Dope Sick" and its themes of personal responsibility and redemption published in 2009 by romero.