Virginia Hamilton
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Virginia Hamilton (March 12, 1936 – February 19, 2002) was a prolific children's author. She wrote over 35 books, including M. C. Higgins, the Great, for which she won the National Book Award in 1974 and the 1975 Newbery Medal. [1]
[edit] Bio
Virginia Hamiliton grew up in Yellow Springs, Ohio. She attended Antioch College and then transferred to Ohio State University. She married Arnold Adoff in 1960. She published her first book, Zeely, in 1967, and continued to write for the rest of her life. Many of her books deal with African-American protagonists, making her a leader in the field of African-American children's literature. Virginia Hamilton has received several awards, including the Edgar Allan Poe Award, the Coretta Scott King Award, the Boston Globe/Horn Book Award, and the Hans Christian Andersen Award. She died of breast cancer in 2002, but the Virginia Hamilton Conference on Multicultural Literature for Youth has been held at Kent State University each year since 1984. [2]
[edit] Books
Virginia Hamilton's other books include The House of Dies Ear (part of the two-part Dies Drear Chronicles), The Planet of Junior Brown, Plain City, Drylongso, Willie Bea and the Time the Martians Landed, a collection of African American folktales The People Could Fly and the Justice Cycle series. [3]
Zeely was the first book that Virginia Hamilton ever wrote.
[edit] External link
Categories: United States children's writer stubs | 1936 births | 2002 deaths | Antioch College alumni | People from Yellow Springs, Ohio | American children's writers | Newbery Medal winners | Edgar Award winners | Winners of the Hans Christian Andersen Award | Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal winners | MacArthur Fellows