“Imagine
writing about Eleanor Roosevelt in 1,500 words using the reading vocabulary of
seven- and eight-year-olds,” says Lucile Davis.
She can imagine it, because
she’s done it. A biography of Eleanor Roosevelt was one of her first published
works.
Since then, Ms. Davis has written many photo-illustrated
biographies for Capstone Press, including Cesar Chavez and Malcolm
X (1997); Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony,
and Lucretia Mott (1998); and Charles Lindbergh and Florence
Nightingale (1999).
Ms. Davis’s books for middle and high school students include two books for
Children’s Press: Alabama (1999), part of
the America the Beautiful Series, and The Mayo Brothers (1998).
Ms. Davis is also a playwright.
Her children’s musical, Flora,
has been produced in three states.
More on Lucile Davis’s books
Harriett Diller
Reviewers
admired Harriett Diller’s first picture book,
Grandaddy’s Highway (Boyds
Mills Press, 1993), for its
“lyricism” and
“quiet, down-home
charm.”
Her other picture books include
Big
Band Sound (Boyds Mills Press,
1996), The
Faraway Drawer (Boyds Mills, 1996),
and
The
Waiting Day (Simon & Schuster, 1994).
After
graduating from Davidson College with a degree in English, Ms. Diller worked at
a variety of jobs before deciding to pursue a career in children’s literature.
While still a student in the Institute’s Writing for Children and Teenagers
course, she began submitting short stories to publishers. She has made sales to
such magazines as Jack And Jill, Turtle,
Straight,
Story
Friends, and Highlights
for Children. Several of her stories have been voted Story of the Month
by the Highlights staff.
More on Harriett Diller’s books
Even more . . .
Dayle Ann
Dodds
The
author of more than twenty books for children, Dodds has written stories about
everything from cross-country racing to creative contraptions to dogs trying on
clothes. Her picture books have won starred reviews in Horn Book,
School Library Journal, and Kirkus, and received numerous awards and
distinctions, including School Library Journal Best Books, American Booksellers
Pick of the Lists, a Parenting Magazine Award of Excellence, and a Junior Library
Guild Selection.
A recent title,
Full House (Candlewick, 2007), is “brimming with personality,” according to
Kirkus Reviews, which advises teachers to “reserve a space on their
bookshelves for this one.”
Teacher’s Pets (Candlewick, 2006), is described by Booklist as a
“buoyant” story that is “fresh and engaging,” and Hello, Sun! (Dial Books,
2005) was praised by School Library Journal for its “catchy refrain” and
“rhyming text that dances across the pages.”
Ms. Dodds’ other credits include Minnie’s
Diner (Candlewick, 2004), Henry’s
Amazing Machine (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2004), Where’s
Pup? (Dial Books, 2003), The Kettles Get New Clothes (Candlewick,
2002), Animal Wash (Walker Books, 2002), and more.
More on Dayle Ann Dodds’ books
Even more . . .
“My
instructor has been an excellent teacher. I count her more as a helpful, learned
friend than a strict teacher. I am very aware that she takes time with each of
my assignments. She definitely knows her ‘stuff’ and is good at getting her
points across.”
—Patricia A. Duffield, Lake Ronkonkoma, NY
Lynda Durrant
Lynda
Durrant’s novels, all published by Clarion Books, have won both accolades and
awards.
Echohawk was praised in Booklist as
“.
. . a remarkably powerful and emotionally affecting first novel . . .” Echohawk
won the Young Adult Choice for the 1996 International Readers Awards, and it was
selected as one of the New York Public Library’s Books for the Teen
Age.
Ms. Durrant’s next novel, The Beaded Moccasins, the Story
of Mary Campbell (1998), was named a 1998 Notable Children’s Trade Book in the
Field of Social Studies by the American Library Association. It also won
the 1998 Ohioana Book Award in the Juvenile Category, and was chosen as one
of
the New York Public Library’s Books for the Teen
Age.
Ms. Durrant’s Turtle Clan Journey (1999) was hailed as
“A gripping
sequel to Echohawk,” wrote the School Library Journal.
Turtle Clan Journey was a Junior Literary Guild
Selection.
Kirkus Reviews described her next novel, Betsy
Zane, the Rose of Fort Henry (2000), as
“A real winner in every sense of
the word.”
The Sun, the Rain, and the Appleseed, a Novel
of Johnny Appleseed’s Life (2003), won an Aesop Accolade from the
American Folklore Society. Her most
recent book is My Last Skirt: The Story of Jennie Hodgers, Union Soldier
(2006).
Lynda Durrant is a member of the Northeast Ohio
Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. Her short stories have
appeared in both Jack And Jill and the Beehive.
More on Lynda Durrant’s books
Even more . . .
A
middle-grade historical adventure set in ninth-century Guatemala, The
Well of Sacrifice (Clarion, 1999) is
an
“engrossing first novel,”
according to Kirkus Reviews.
“Eboch
crafts an exciting narrative with a richly textured depiction of ancient Mayan
society . . . The novel shines not only for a faithful recreation of an
unfamiliar, ancient world, but also for the introduction of a brave, likable and
determined heroine.” The Well of Sacrifice
was listed in the Seattle Public Library’s brochures
“Grades
5 & 6 Books to Build On,”
“Chicano/Latino Doorways to Culture and Tradition,” and
“Read up a
Storm.”
Ms. Eboch
has published three
nonfiction books for middle and high school students, Turkey
(2003), Yemen (2003), and Life Among the Maya (2005), all of which
were published by Lucent Books. Her work for
children has also been published in AppleSeeds
and Ladybug.
Chris Eboch has worked as an editor and
writer for magazines such as International Musician and
Beauty Fashion. More than 100 of her articles have been published in those and other
magazines including Psychology Today, Women’s Sports and Fitness,
and Grand Circle Traveler. Her articles on writing have appeared in
Writer’s Digest
and the SCBWI Bulletin.
Ms.
Eboch taught fiction writing through New Mexico Tech’s Community College and
has led dozens of workshops for children and adults at conferences and writing
festivals.
Critique group partners rave about her editing skills, especially her
ability to see both the large picture and the small details.
More on Chris Eboch’s books
Even more . . .
Trinka Enell
“An
excellent young children’s book” and “fun all the way” is what Book World
said about Trinka Enell’s picture book, Roll Over, Rosie (Clarion). The
Bulletin and the Kutztown Book Review also praised this Junior
Library Guild selection, calling it “a delightful story” and “highly
recommended.”
Ms. Enell also writes poetry and nonfiction, and fiction for middle-grade and
young adult readers. Her short stories and poetry have appeared in several
children’s
magazines, including Spider, Child Life, Children’s
Playmate, Jack And Jill, Children’s
Digest, Turtle, Children’s
Magic Window, and Highlights for Children. Highlights also
published seven of her stories in its Stories from Highlights anthology series.
“Turtle
Makes a Birthday Card,”
a story for young readers that appeared in Highlights for Children, was
chosen by several hundred employees at Highlights as their favorite story
of the month.
More on Trinka Enell’s books
Even more . . .
“My
instructor has shown me different ways to make my writing more creative. She has
a very kind way of showing me my errors and the best ways to avoid them. She has
been very patient and positive. Since teaching involves constructive criticism,
her patience and positive attitude have been key to my learning process.”
—Hubert L. Sellers, Jr.,
Odum, GA
Jill Esbaum
“This
is an excellent, fun-filled book,” said river historian Barbara Huffman of Jill Esbaum’s picture book, Ste-e-e-e-eamboat A-Comin’! (Farrar, Straus
& Giroux, 2005),
“that should sustain a sense of wonder and adventure in young
readers for years to come.”
In a starred review, School Library Journal
said, “This salute to a bygone transportation era is sure to engage children as
they, too, thrill to the sound of that once-familiar call,
‘Ste-e-e-e-eamboat a-comin!’”
Ms. Esbaum’s
debut picture
book, Stink Soup (FSG, 2004), sold to the
first publisher to whom it was submitted. In addition to Stink Soup
and Ste-e-e-e-eamboat A-Comin’!, her
other picture books
include Estelle Takes a Bath (Henry Holt, 2006) and To the
Big Top (FSG, publishing date to be announced).
More than 45 of Ms. Esbaum’s poems,
articles, and stories have appeared in magazines such as Babybug, Cricket,
Cicada, Guideposts for Kids, Highlights for Children, Jack And Jill, Ladybug,
Pockets, Spider, Teen, and others.
Her Highlights article,
“Tackling the Trash” (April 2002), profiling river environmentalist Chad Pregracke, was voted best of the issue by the magazine’s editors, who named her
Author of the Month.
Some of her articles and poems have been resold to
educational publishers. While she now writes exclusively for children, her work
has also been published in ByLine, Country, Country Woman, and
Once Upon A Time.
Her
poem, “A New View,” was included in Philomel’s 2002 anthology of humorous
poetry, I Invited a Dragon to Dinner (and Other Poems to Make You Laugh
Out Loud), after being chosen in a nationwide contest that Ms. Esbaum
saw announced in the Institute’s Children’s Writer newsletter.
More on Jill Esbaum’s books
Even more . . .
Jan
Fields’ writing for children and families has appeared in such varied magazines
as Boys’ Quest, Highlights, Shining Star, Crayola Kids,
Ladybug, and Single-Parent Family. Her story,
“Miss
Fiona’s Ferret,”
was a finalist in the Tessie Walden New Voices Award, and her poem,
“Snowflakes,”
and accompanying craft were chosen for inclusion in the Best of Holidays and
Seasonal Celebrations anthology. She has also written 20 storybooks for the
Family Company as part of its She’s Like Me line of collector’s dolls, as
well as a series of stories for their online promotion.
Ms. Fields is also
the founder of the e-zine, Kid Magazine Writers, which offers in-depth
analysis of markets for both new and experienced writers. Her drive to help new
writers also led to her current position as Web editor for the Institute of
Children’s Literature.
For
more than 10 years, Ms. Fields taught writing to adults and children at a
community college in North Carolina. She currently moderates a busy Internet
mailing list for children’s
writers.
Lizann Flatt
Both a writer and an editor, Lizann Flatt brings an extra
advantage to her students.
“I look at writing with the critical eye of
an editor,” she says,
“and because I’m also a writer, I know how to
make those editorial observations both helpful and sensitive.”
Ms. Flatt is the former editor of Chickadee
magazine. During her stewardship, Chickadee won the Parents’
Choice Gold Seal Award in 1994, the Silver Seal in 1995, and 1994
Canadian Magazine of the Year.
Her writing has also won awards, including a
Distinguished Achievement Award from EdPress. Ms. Flatt’s first story was published in OWL
as the winning entry in a children’s short story contest. She was also named one
of three winners in the 2001 Highlights for Children
fiction contest.
Her writing credits include My
First Nature Treasury (Owl Books, 1994; Sierra Club Books for Children,
1995), which was chosen as a starred entry in the Our Choice list by the
Canadian Children’s Book Centre; and Backgammon for
Kids (Somerville House, 1999: Penguin Putnam, 1999).
More on Lizann Flatt’s books
Even more . . .
“My
instructor is excellent. She is able to evaluate my strengths and
weaknesses and communicate clearly. She has a wonderful blend of inspiring
comments and critical assessments. I am very happy with my progress.”
—Patricia W. Miller, Berea, KY
Sheila Wood Foard
Sheila
Wood Foard’s stories, articles, essays, and poems for children and adults have
sold to more than 60 publications.
Her work has appeared in
TEEN,
Highlights for Children,
Cicada,
Cricket,
Spider,
Ladybug,
Wee
Ones, Hopscotch for Girls,
Nature
Friend, Hob Nob,
Missouri
Conservationist for Kids, Albuquerque
Journal, ByLine,
and Country
Home.
For young readers
she has written magazine profiles of famous Americans, including scientist
Rachel Carson, architect Mary Jane Colter, and artist Georgia O’Keeffe. Her
biography of Mexican muralist Diego Rivera (Chelsea House, 2003) targets teen
readers.
Ms. Foard
completed a middle-grade novel, Harvey Girl, while enrolled in the Institute’s course. It won
awards in both the SouthWest Writers (SWW) and Heartland Writers Guild (HWG)
contests.
Ms. Foard is also a graduate of the Institute’s courses,
Writing for Magazines and
Beyond
the Basics. Five of her assignments from these courses sold to
children’s magazines.
More on Sheila Wood Foard’s books
Even more . . .
Louise Munro Foley
No
matter what genre—mystery, adventure, or suspense—humor is the common thread
that runs through all 29 of Louise Foley’s titles.
Ms. Foley’s credits include The Cat-nap Catastrophe
(TOR, 1999); and My Substitute Teacher’s Gone Batty, The
Bird-Brained Fiasco, and The Phoney Baloney Professor, all
part of the middle-grade series The Vampire Cat (TOR, 1996).
She is also the author of Poison! Said
the Cat, Blood! Said the Cat, and Thief! Said the Cat (Berkley, 1992);
and The Mystery of the Sacred Stones (Bantam, 1988).
In addition to writing fiction for young readers, Ms. Foley
served as editorial consultant on five grant-funded social work texts, including Stand
Close to the Door, which won the National League of American Pen Women’s Gold Biennial award for editing.
Her articles have been published in The
Writer, Writer’s Digest, Horn Book, Christian Science Monitor, and Lawyer’s Weekly.
Ms. Foley is a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and
Illustrators.
More on Louise Munro Foley’s books
Even more . . .
Christine Ford
Christine
Ford’s debut picture book, SNOW! (HarperCollins, 1999) was called “an ode
to new-fallen snow” by Publishers Weekly, and the Horn Book said
that its “playful word pairs…will amuse young listeners.” SNOW! was
chosen for the Chicago Public Schools Recommended Reading List, and later became
a Book-of-the-Month Club selection.
Ms. Ford’s more recent titles include The Soldier’s Night Before Christmas
(Random House, 2006), called a “witty parody” by Kirkus Reviews and a
“lighthearted, humorous retelling” by School Library Journal; and
Scout (Delacorte/Random House Children’s Books, 2006), a middle-grade novel.
This bittersweet coming-of-age story about a young girl who reluctantly faces
the truth about her best friend’s abusive father was called a “treasure” by
School Library Journal.
Ms. Ford is a former teacher and now visits schools to present author
programs for children. She also teaches picture book writing workshops for
adults.
She is active with
local writers and served as Chairperson of the NC/NE Texas Chapter of the
Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators in 2004. She served as
Consultation Coordinator for the 2003 NC/NE Texas Chapter SCBWI Annual
Conference, and Publicity Chair for the 2005 conference.
More on Christine Ford’s books
“I
started this course as a person scared to death of putting an idea on paper. My
instructor was able to mold my few good skills into a finished work….She has
taken my desire to write and molded it into a skill I can use and be confident
with forever.”
—Douglas E. Oliver, Overland Park, KS
Leila Foster
Author
of 23 published children’s books and many more professional books and
articles, Leila Foster has written country studies, biographies, novels, and
issue books for children of various age levels.
Most of her books have been published by Children’s Press
as part of
its Enchantment of the World series and Cornerstones of Freedom series (1990 and 1991).
More recently, she has several titles in Heineman’s Continents series.
Some of her other books include Life Among the Pagans (Capstone, 2007),
Oman
(Scholastic Library, 1999), Kuwait
(Scholastic Library, 1998), Benjamin Franklin (Enslow, 1997), and The Story of the Persian Gulf War (Scholastic
Library, 1991). Her historical novel for adults, Search for the Cross
(2007), was published by Capstone.
More on Leila Foster’s books
Even more . . .
Mary Virginia Fox
Mary
Virginia Fox has published more than 40 young adult books ranging from science
and history to biographies and portraits of nations.
She has written about Somalia, New Guinea, and other countries
for Children’s Press. North America, South America,
Australia, Costa Rica, and Columbia
were released by Heinemann Library in 2001.
Her biographies of Ronald Reagan,
Princess Diana, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, and other personalities and
historical figures have been published by Dillon Press and others. Two of her
science books, Rockets and Lasers, were published by Marshall
Cavendish in 1995. Her most recent book is Scheduling the Heavens: The Story
of Edmond Halley (Morgan Reynolds, 2007).
Ms. Fox’s writing credits also include stories and articles in Wee Wisdom, Playmate, Bee Hive, Teen,
Jack And Jill, Humpty Dumpty, and other magazines.
More on Mary Virginia Fox’s books
Even more . . .
Mary E. Furlong
For
children’s book author and short-story writer Mary E. Furlong, the path to
success is paved with memorable characters.
Favorite characters from her work include Follow the Leader’s Kiddo (Zaner-Bloser,
2004), a cuddly robot with leadership potential; Bingo, a teacup-size Chihuahua
with big-dog courage in Biff and Bingo (Zaner-Bloser, 2005); and Joe
Martin, a budding young cartoonist who creates his own brand of superhero in
A Hero for Plunket Street (Zaner-Bloser, 2006). Real working dogs serve as
the heroic central characters in her nonfiction title, Dogs That Lead the
Blind (Zaner-Bloser, 2006).
Some of her other titles, also published by Zaner-Bloser, include The Best
Dog in the World (2006), When the Time Comes (2006), True Friends
(2006), Real Dog/Super Dog (2006), Good Friends (2005), and
Home Free (2005).
Ms. Furlong’s short stories have appeared in Highlights for Children,
Pockets, and Shoofly, an audio magazine for children. Two of her
stories, “The Flyaway Umbrella” and “The Hudson Street Gang,” were chosen for
inclusion in Highlights paperback anthologies, and two others were
awarded honorable mentions in the Writer’s Digest fiction writing
competition. Her children’s story, “Fifteen Minutes or So,” was a top-ten entry
in the Children’s Writer Pre-K Story contest and helped her become a
Highlights Author of the Month.
More on Mary E. Furlong’s books

“My instructor
possesses the ability to find the strengths in my work that I wasn’t so sure
about. Her encouragement is sincere, not gushy or overdone. She’s the most
positive instructor I’ve ever had in any class in all my school years.”
—LorRetta
Drake, Spring, TX
Nancy Furstinger
As
former managing editor at Silver Burdett Press, a division of Simon & Schuster,
Nancy Furstinger was responsible for an annual list of 200 children’s books.
She worked on a variety of nonfiction books for preschool children through young
adults from 1990-1996, including Our World (ecology series); Alvin Josephy’s
Biography Series of American Indians; Pioneers in Change (biography series); and
The American Dream (business leaders series).
Ms. Furstinger has also authored several books of her own. An animal aficionado,
Nancy Furstinger ascribes to the adage
“Write
what you know.”
Her love of animals led her to write her first book, Creative Crafts for
Critters (Scholastic Book Clubs, 1999).
Since then she has written Fun Stuff to Do with Your Best Friend: The
Interactive Dog Book (Doral Publishing, 2000), as well as numerous titles
about various breeds of dogs and cats for Checkerboard Press (2005).
More on Nancy Furstinger’s books
Even
more . . .
Dayle Campbell Gaetz
Dayle
Campbell Gaetz has written 13 novels for young adults and middle-grade readers.
In addition to two historical novels, she has written an animal adventure
novel, two science fiction books, and four mysteries for 9- to 12-year-old
readers.
Many of her novels have been selected
for the Canadian Children’s Book Centre’s Our Choice Award. In 1998, The
Golden Rose (Pacific Educational Press, 1997) was nominated for two readers’ choice awards. Mystery
from History (Orca Book Publishers, 2001) was a 2001 Silver Birch Award
nominee.
As part of a new series of Canadian biographies for schools, Ms. Gaetz
wrote two books, Catriona Le May Doan, Fastest Woman on Ice
and Birute Galdikas, Friend of the Orangutans, (Pearson Education
Canada, 2004).
Her mystery series, published by Orca Book Publishers, includes Mystery from History
(2001), Barkerville
Gold (2004), and Alberta Alibi (2005).
Her other books include Spoiled Rotten (2005) and
Finding Treasure (publishing date to be announced), both titles with Orca.
Ms. Gaetz also wrote three
“high-interest, low-vocabulary” novels to encourage reluctant readers. Her
most recent, No Problem (Orca, 2004), is on the East
Greenbush, New York, Community Library’s Quick Picks list of Recommended
Reading.
Ms. Gaetz’s articles have been published
in children’s
magazines such as Wild Outdoor World, Curiocity for
Kids, and Kidsworld.
More on Dayle Campbell Gaetz’s books
Jan
Goldberg
Ms.
Goldberg is the author of 60 fiction and nonfiction books that traverse a wide
range of topics and levels, including beginning readers, chapter books, and
hi-lo books (high interest, low reading level).
Her credits include Green Berets: The U.S. Army Special Forces (Rosen
Publishing Group, 2003), named by VOYA as one of the best nonfiction books for
2003; Great Explorers: Hernando de Soto (Rosen Publishing Group, 2003);
Napoleon (Zaner-Bloser Educational Publishers, 2003); and Careers for
Puzzle Solvers and Other Methodical Thinkers (McGraw-Hill, 2002).
Perfectionism: What’s Bad About Being Too Good? (Free Spirit, 1999) was a
Parents’ Choice Approved Award Winner and a Parent Council Selection, as well as
a New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age.
In
addition, Ms. Goldberg has published more than 1,000 articles for children and
young adults. Publications in which her work has appeared include Parenting,
Splash Magazine, and Successful Student Magazine. She has also
contributed to numerous textbooks, teacher’s
editions, and educational consulting projects.
More on Jan Goldberg’s books
Even more . . .
“I feel the
advice and guidance I’m
getting from my instructor is invaluable. I’m
not usually a
‘prognosticator,’
but I think I’ll
look back at this time next year and feel that taking this course was the
smartest move I ever made.”
—Diana
Denny, Indianapolis, IN
Janet
Graber
Janet
Graber’s
young adult novel, Resistance (Marshall Cavendish, 2005), was praised by
School Library Journal, which described the book as having
“winning
characterization and a compelling plot.”
Ms. Graber’s
other works have evoked praise as well. “A
magical and beautifully complex narrative skillfully woven into moving yet
unsentimental realistic fiction . . .” were the words used by Julia Messina,
Editor of Cricket Magazine, to describe Janet Graber’s story,
“Thanksgiving Gumbo.” The story received a Distinguished Achievement Award
from the American Association of Educational Publishers/Ed Press.
Janet
Graber’s credits include a nonfiction book,
I Couldn’t Do It Without My Group: Secrets of Starting and Running a
Successful Writers’ Group (Children’s
Book Insider, 1995), and a picture book,
Jacob and the Polar Bears
(Moon Mountain Publishing, 2002).
She
has also completed a trilogy,
The Crossland Chronicles,
for young adult readers that is currently under consideration by
publishers. Articles by Ms. Graber have appeared in
School
Magazine, the Newcastle
Journal, London
Evening Standard, and Once
Upon a Time.
Ms.
Graber has participated on faculty at writing seminars, and she is a regular
visitor to schools where she talks to students about her enduring passion, the
process of writing. She is a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers
and Illustrators.
More on Janet Graber’s books
Pamela D. Greenwood
“She
knows kids,” said the Wilson
Library Bulletin in reviewing Pamela Greenwood’s first book,
“and
she respects them.”
In her first two chapter books,
What About My Goldfish? (Clarion, 1993) and
I
Found Mouse (Clarion, 1994), both Junior Literary Guild selections, Ms.
Greenwood has created characters that young children find real and
likeable. Her stories have also
appeared in Junior Trails, Pockets,
and Highlights for Children.
Ms.
Greenwood also writes nonfiction with a coauthor under the pen name Ryan Ann
Hunter. Holiday House published
their first four books: Cross A Bridge (1998),
Into The Sky (1998), Dig
A Tunnel (1999), and Take
Off! (2000).
Dig
A Tunnel was a Parenting Magazine Book of the Year for 1999.
The coauthors’ latest books are
Robots
Slither (G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 2003);
Getting in the Air: A Timeline of Flight (National Geographic
Society’s Children’s Books, 2003); and
In
Disguise: Stories of Real Women Spies (Beyond Words, 2003).
Books under Ryan Ann Hunter pen name
Even more . . .
More on Pamela D. Greenwood’s books
Even more . . .
Marcia Gross
Marcia Gross, who writes
under the pseudonym Tovah S. Yavin, achieved literary success when her first
middle-grade manuscript, All-Star Season (Lerner/Kar-Ben, 2007), won the
prestigious Sydney Taylor Manuscript Award given by the Association of Jewish
Libraries. One member of the award committee described the novel as “a
librarian’s dream” thanks to its popular subject matter and stellar writing.
Since the completion of that first manuscript, Ms. Gross has published numerous
short stories in anthologies, including her most recent short fiction, “Why Do
the Horses Stand in the Sea,” which appears in Summer Shorts (Blooming
Tree Press, 2006). Her other work appears in Jewish Sports Stories for Kids
(2004) and Jewish Love Stories for Kids (2002), both from Pitspopany
Press.
Marcia
Gross has also worked in the magazine market publishing stories and poems for
children in Skipping Stones, Read America!, and Wee Ones
e-magazine. She currently serves as a staff writer for Science Weekly, an
educational newsletter published for grades K-6.
Books under Tovah S. Yavin pen name
“My
instructor’s critiques are always helpful. I respect her frankness and
appreciate her comments now even more. She encourages me and relates to me on a
personal level. She is patient and takes time to explain her criticism in a
positive manner. I feel she is interested in my work and wants me to
succeed.”
—Deborah Martin, Rossmoor, CA
Vicki Grove
Vicki
Grove is the author of ten young adult and middle-grade novels, and nearly 300
short stories and articles for adults and children.
Her book,
Destiny (Putnam,
2000), won the Midwest Authors Fiction Prize and was called a
“grounded and
valuable”
story by Publishers Weekly, filled with
“lyrical prose and vibrant,
gracefully detailed characters”
(Kirkus).
Ms. Grove has seven more novels for young people to her credit, all of which
were published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons.
They include The Starplace (1999) and
Reaching Dustin (1998), both School Library Journal Best Books; Crystal Garden (1995);
Rimwalkers
(1993); Fastest Friend in the West (1990); Junglerama (1989); and
Good-bye, My
Wishing Star (1987), the last of which won the G. P. Putnam’s Sons Fiction Prize and was
chosen by the American Booksellers Association as a Pick of the Lists book.
Ms. Grove’s numerous short stories and articles have appeared in a variety of
publications such as Writer’s Digest,
Teen, American Girl, Today’s Christian
Woman, Catholic Digest, Reader’s Digest,
Woman’s World, and more.
More on Vicki Grove’s books
Even more . . .
Pauline Guppy
After majoring in English literature in college, Pauline Guppy
earned a master’s degree in teaching. She taught composition and the
appreciation of literature to grades 9-12, and correspondence courses for the U.S.
Armed Forces Institute; she also worked at a university.
Then, some 20 years ago, Pauline Guppy sat down to write. She
sold her first stories to My Pleasure, Five/Six, and
Discovery before she began to sell to Saturday Evening Post
publications including Young World, Science Fiction Stories,
and Child Life.
Ms. Guppy’s most recent work has appeared in Children’s
Digest, Radar, Junior Trails, and Primary
Treasure. She has twice been a finalist in the annual Pacific Northwest
Writers Conference competition, both in the Juvenile Books category and in Articles and Short
Stories for Children.
Ms. Guppy is a member of the Society of Children’s Book
Writers and Illustrators and the National League of American Pen Women.
Geraldine Gutfreund
When
she was a newlywed in a small town, Geraldine Gutfreund found scant employment,
so she took to reading, which rekindled her childhood interest in writing. She’s
been writing ever since.
Her credits include
5 books, 23 stories and
articles, and more than 20 poems in Cricket, Hopscotch,
The Writer, Writer’s Digest, St. Anthony’s Messenger, Children’s Writer, and a wide variety
of other publications.
Ms. Gutfreund typically draws from her scientific knowledge of
animals and their habitats and her interest in nature and the environment to
develop her material. She also uses folklore.
Her books, Animals Have Cousins,
Too (Franklin Watts, 1990), Nature’s Unlovables
(Publications International, 1990), and Vanishing Animal Neighbors
(Franklin Watts, 1993), are entertaining yet scientifically based on zoology
and aimed at the middle grades.

More on Geraldine Gutfreund’s books
Even more . . .
Continued
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