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Louise Fitzhugh

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Louise Fitzhugh
Louise Fitzhugh.jpg}} |
Louise Fitzhugh, date unknown
Born October 5, 1928
Memphis, Tennessee
Died November 19, 1974
New Milford, Connecticut
Occupation novelist, illustrator
Nationality Flag of the United States United States
Writing period 1959-1974
Genres Children's, Young adult

Louise Fitzhugh (October 5, 1928 - November 19, 1974) was an American author and illustrator of children's fiction and young adult fiction. Her work includes Harriet the Spy, The Long Secret, and Nobody's Family is Going to Change.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Born in Memphis, Tennessee, she soon experienced her parents' divorce, from which her father, Millsaps Fitzhugh, gained custody, and so she lived with him in the South. She attended Miss Hutchinsons' School and three different universities, without obtaining a degree. According to her obituary in the New York Times, Fitzhugh graduated from Barnard College in 1950. She lived most of her adult life in New York City and had houses in both Long Island and Bridgewater, Connecticut. She was married briefly to Ed Thompson, whom she dated in high school. After high school, she primarily dated women.

Career

Her first book was Suzuki Beane in 1961, a children's picture book that was intended as a parody of Eloise; while Eloise lived in the Plaza, Suzuki was the daughter of beatnik parents and slept on a mattress on the floor of a Bleecker Street pad in Greenwich Village. Working closely with author Sandra Scoppettone, Louise Fitzhugh illustrated Suzuki Beane, which incorporated typewriter font and line drawings in an original way, even hipsterish way. Although a parody both of Eloise and beatnik conceit, the book sprang to life as a genuine work of literature. Today, it is a much sought-after book on used-book websites. Fitzhugh's best-known book was Harriet the Spy, published in 1964 to some controversy since so many characters were far from admirable. It has since become a classic. As her New York Times' obituary published November 19, 1974 states, "The book helped introduce a new realism to children's fiction and has been widely imitated." Harriet is the neglected daughter of two absentee, preoccupied parents who leave her in the care of her nanny, Ole Golly, in their Manhattan townhouse. Hardly the feminine girl heroine typical of the early 1960s, Harriet is a writer who notes everything about everybody in her world in a notebook which ultimately falls into the wrong hands. Ole Golly gives Harriet the unlikely but practical advice that, "You must lie but to yourself you must always tell the truth." By and large, Harriet the Spy was well-received -- it was awarded a New York Times Outstanding Book Award in 1964 -- and has sold 4 million copies since publication. Two characters from the book, Beth Ellen and Sport, were featured in two of Fitzhugh's later books, The Long Secret and Sport. The Long Secret deals fairly honestly with female puberty; the main characters are teenage girls who discuss how their changing bodies feel. Another young adult manuscript, Amelia, concerned two girls falling in love. This manuscript was not published and was later lost. Fitzhugh illustrated many of her books and had works exhibited in Banfer Gallery, New York, in 1963, among many other galleries.

Death and afterward

She died in 1974 of a brain aneurysm. Her obituary was published in the New York Times.[1]

Works

Published works

  • Suzuki Beane (illustrator), 1961
  • Harriet the Spy, 1964
  • The Long Secret, 1965
  • Bang Bang You're Dead (illustrator), 1969
  • Nobody's Family Is Going to Change, 1974

Published posthumously:

  • Sport, 1979
  • I Am Five, 1978
  • I Am Four, 1982
  • I Am Three, 1982

Awards

Through the course of her writing career she won many awards, three of them posthumous:

  • New York Times Outstanding Books of the Year citation, 1964
  • Sequoyah Award, 1967 (Harriet the Spy)
  • Children's Book Bulletin, 1976 (Nobody's Family is Going to Change)
  • Children's Workshop Other Award, 1976 (Nobody's Family is Going to Change)
  • Emmy Award for children's entertainment special (The Tap Dance Kid, based on Nobody's Family is Going to Change).

References

  1. ^ "Louise Fitzhugh Is Dead at 46; 'Harriet the Spy' Author-Artist", New York Times: 50, 1974-11-21

External links

Persondata
NAME Fitzhugh, Louise
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION
DATE OF BIRTH October 5, 1928
PLACE OF BIRTH Memphis, Tennessee
DATE OF DEATH November 19, 1974
PLACE OF DEATH New Milford, Connecticut

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    Louise Fitzhugh
    "Some people are one way and some people are another and that's that" observed Louise Fitzhugh's best-known character, Harriet M. Welsch, in the ground-breaking young-adult novel Harriet the Spy. Calling this statement the "moral" of Fitzhugh's writing,... more

    Louise Fitzhugh
    "At times I refuse to be moved"; so says the five-year-old heroine of Louise Fitzhugh's posthumous picture book I Am Five (1978). She shares her obstinacy with many of Fitzhugh's characters. The people in Fitzhugh's darkly satiric (and often hilarious) n... more


     
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    Louise Fitzhugh from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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