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Walter Dean Myers
Walter
Dean Myers is a writer of children's and young adult literature. Walter
Dean Myers was born in West Virginia in 1937 but spent most of his
childhood and young adult life in Harlem. He was raised by foster
parents and remembers a happy but tumultuous life while going through
his own teen years.
Suffering with a speech impediment, he cultivated a habit of writing
poetry and short stories and acquired an early love of reading. In
1954 he quit high school and joined the army. He later held many positions
with various agencies including the New York State Department of Labor,
the post office, a rehabilitation center and a transformer company.
All during this time, Mr. Myers was writing for various magazines
and periodicals.
The turning point in his career came when he won a contest run by
the Council on Interracial Books for Children with his book Where
Does a Day Go? in 1969. Since then he has supported himself, his second
wife, and four children with his very prolific writing in the area
of children's and young adult literature.
He volunteers at schools in Jersey City where is presently lives.
He received his degree from Empire State College in 1984. Myers explains
his feeling for the young adult novel, "The special place of the young
adult novel should be in its ability to address the needs of the reader
to understand his or her relationships with the world, with each other,
and with adults.
The young adult novel often allows the reader to directly identify
with a protagonist of similar interests and development." He is a
compassionate, introspective person who believes, "It is this language
of values which I hope to bring to my books. . . . I want to bring
values to those who have not been valued, and I want to etch those
values in terms of the ideal.
Young people need ideals which identify them, and their lives, as
central . . . guideposts which tell them what they can be, should
be, and indeed are." Following his success with young adult literature,
Meyer has branched out to include topics of nonFiction including black
history with his recent Now Is Your Time! and The Righteous Revenge
of Artemis Bonner an 1880's historical setting. Both have been received
with much acclaim. |