ONTD

1:05 pm - 05/17/2012

Jean Craighead George, Children’s Author, Dies at 92

Jean Craighead George, a Newbery Award-winning writer for young people whose books brought the natural world from the Catskill Mountains to the Alaskan tundra to wild, luminous life, died on Tuesday in Mount Kisco, N.Y. She was 92.

Her family confirmed the death.

The author of more than 100 fiction and nonfiction titles that have collectively sold millions of copies, Ms. George was best known for two novels for older children, “My Side of the Mountain” (1959), which she also illustrated, and “Julie of the Wolves” (1972), illustrated by John Schoenherr. That book won the Newbery Medal — considered the Pulitzer Prize of children’s letters — in 1973.

“My Side of the Mountain” tells the story of Sam Gribley, a youth who forsakes a life of quiet desperation in New York City to live on his own in the Catskills wilderness. There, he survives by virtue of the deep sympathy with nature that animates all of Ms. George’s protagonists, until the modern world closes in again.

The novel was made into a 1969 feature film of the same title, starring Teddy Eccles and Theodore Bikel.

“Julie of the Wolves,” which was also a finalist for the National Book Award, centers on a 13-year-old Eskimo girl, Miyax, or Julie as she is known in English. Fleeing an oppressive arranged marriage, she strikes out to live alone in the Alaskan wild. Her survival is aided by a family of wolves, with whom she learns to communicate via sound and gesture, much as Ms. George did during a trip to the Arctic to research the book.



Throughout her career, Ms. George was praised by reviewers for her lyric prose, vivid descriptions and meticulous research. (Until she was in her mid-80s, she routinely visited the wild locales about which she wrote.)

Her other books include sequels to “My Side of the Mountain,” among them “On the Far Side of the Mountain” (1990), and two to “Julie of the Wolves”: “Julie” (1994) and “Julie’s Wolf Pack” (1997), both illustrated by Wendell Minor.

Jean Carolyn Craighead was born in Washington on July 2, 1919. Her father was an entomologist for the United States Forest Service, and the family often accompanied him on trips into the field. (Her brothers, John and Frank, grew up to become prominent naturalists who studied grizzly bears.)

It was not until she started school that young Jean realized that her first pet — an eminently reasonable presence in the Craighead home — was not strictly conventional.

“By the time I got to kindergarten,” Ms. George told The Journal News of Westchester in 2003, “I was surprised to find out I was the only kid with a turkey vulture.”

She earned a bachelor’s degree in 1941 from Pennsylvania State University, where she studied English and science. She later worked as a reporter in Washington, first for the International News Service, a forerunner of United Press International, and afterward for The Washington Post, where she wrote features about the White House.

In 1944 she married John George, an ornithologist, and settled into a domestic routine that included writing, motherhood and wildlife management. Over time, as she recounted in her memoir for children, “The Tarantula in My Purse” (1996), the household grew to include 173 pets, not counting cats and dogs.

Among them were a crow that gathered coins and deposited them in the rainspout of the local bank and an owl that adored taking showers in the family tub. (Overnight guests at the George home were met with a cautionary sign: “Please remove owl after showering.”)

Also in residence, for a brief, nervous time, was a “darling beaver,” as Ms. George later recounted, adding, “We didn’t keep him long because he cut down the furniture.”

Ms. George, a longtime resident of Chappaqua, N.Y., was divorced in 1963. She is survived by her brother John; a daughter, Twig George, a writer of nature books for children; two sons, Craig, who studies whales, and Luke, an ornithologist; and six grandchildren.

Her other books include a memoir for adults, “Journey Inward” (1982).

For all her honors, perhaps the greatest index of Ms. George’s appeal could be found in the mail she received from her readers. Again and again, she said, they homed in on the truly salient thing about the wilderness lives she so often portrayed.

As she told The New York Times in 2003, “Children will often write, ‘We love your books because there are no adults in them.’ ”



Source.

I probably read Julie of the Wolves five hundred times when I was a kid. Between Jean and Maurice, it's a little sad working in the Kid Lit world right now :(
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reginageorge 17th-May-2012 05:23 pm (UTC)
WHAT THE FUCK
surrounds 17th-May-2012 05:24 pm (UTC)
WHAT IS GOING ON?! D:
klutzy_girl 17th-May-2012 05:24 pm (UTC)
Another one? Wow.

Rest in peace.

And I didn't know "Julie of the Wolves" (an excellent book) had sequels! May have to check those out.
ecctv 17th-May-2012 05:25 pm (UTC)
Ohh I loved Julie of the Wolves!!


And there is a book I have been trying to remember for years. Its about a girl who lives with her aunts? And the have a big house and upstairs she can decorate each room however she wants, and decorates some in historical ways. And she makes friends with this guy at school and at one point he calls home and no one answers so he has a conversation with the answering machine.
It is driving me bonkers trying to remember it :(
shelostcontro1 17th-May-2012 05:25 pm (UTC)
I loved that book. RIP.
To try and have a little bit of happiness in the wake of all these death posts, what is your favorite Childrens book ONTD?

reginageorge 17th-May-2012 05:26 pm (UTC)
hector and prudence

shelostcontro1 17th-May-2012 05:29 pm (UTC)
i loved all of his books!
sylarsexypants 17th-May-2012 05:27 pm (UTC)
The Phantom Tollbooth
ecctv 17th-May-2012 05:28 pm (UTC)
kids chapter book, I loved "The Girl Who Owned A City" and The Westing Game
shelostcontro1 17th-May-2012 05:29 pm (UTC)




blondelilly 17th-May-2012 05:29 pm (UTC)
The Little Prince. Even better when you read it as an adult.
vervain 17th-May-2012 05:31 pm (UTC)
preeho 17th-May-2012 05:33 pm (UTC)
I loved books like the Wayside School series and of course every Judy Blume book ever, and all of Madeleine L'Engle and Enid Blyton and the BSC and The Biggest Pumpkin Ever and Alexander and the Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Day and oh man, I loved it all.
zeldafitzgerald 17th-May-2012 05:33 pm (UTC)

tragickingdomxo 17th-May-2012 05:34 pm (UTC)
All the Little House on the Prairie books
ladyserenity84 17th-May-2012 05:36 pm (UTC)
I have too many to name, tbh. I read so much as a little girl, but in addition to George's work, I loved "The Phantom Tollbooth", "The Giver", and "The Westing Game" among many. (Those are the ones I can think of off the top of my head.)
smallaffair 17th-May-2012 05:37 pm (UTC)
the BFG
nikkyc2001 17th-May-2012 05:39 pm (UTC)
Little House on the Prairie. A Wrinkle in Time. The Indian in the Cupboard. Where the Red Fern Grows. The Witches.
goldengal1193 17th-May-2012 05:43 pm (UTC)
For small child.



For regular child.





ellyrianna 17th-May-2012 05:48 pm (UTC)
Adolescence:





hoot 17th-May-2012 05:49 pm (UTC)





Plus anything by Roald Dahl.
thickfreakness 17th-May-2012 05:57 pm (UTC)
Anything by Shel Silverstein, or the artwork of Tomie DePaola.
shikinluv 17th-May-2012 05:58 pm (UTC)
most Roald Dahl and Dr. Seuss books
Hope was Here by Joan Bauer
The Very Hungry Caterpillar
Goodnight Moon, Guess How Much I Love You
Babysitter's Club and Sweet Valley Kids

Gah, how does one pick just one favourite...I could go on forever
ourferocity 17th-May-2012 06:01 pm (UTC)


idk if it's ever been translated into english
winninghearts 17th-May-2012 06:06 pm (UTC)






Edited at 2012-05-17 06:08 pm (UTC)
rhcp 17th-May-2012 05:25 pm (UTC)
RIP :(
fancycarousel 17th-May-2012 05:26 pm (UTC)
another one omg rip<3
chrisgold 17th-May-2012 05:26 pm (UTC)
RIP but is everyone dying today?
piratesswoop 17th-May-2012 05:26 pm (UTC)
we read my side of the mountain in elementary school, iirc

RIP :(
sandstorm 17th-May-2012 05:27 pm (UTC)
Oh, I remember My Side of The Mountain!

Why are celebrities dropping like flies today? RIP
angelamermaid 17th-May-2012 05:27 pm (UTC)
RIP Jean. I loved My Side of the Mountain! I didn't know there was a sequel, must track it down.

Edited at 2012-05-17 05:28 pm (UTC)
nikkyc2001 17th-May-2012 05:32 pm (UTC)
That was my favorite!
adaveen 17th-May-2012 05:28 pm (UTC)
"Julie of the Wolves" is one of my favorite books ever.

annadraper 17th-May-2012 05:29 pm (UTC)
my side of the mountain.... wonderful book.
masterofmystery 17th-May-2012 05:30 pm (UTC)
good grief, every other post today here has been about someone's death. :/
cickiz 17th-May-2012 05:30 pm (UTC)
oh shit. Julie of the Wolves. wtf is going on
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