Judith guest author biography templates
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Guest, Judith
Personal
Born March 29, 1936, in Detroit, MI; daughter of Harry Reginald (a businessman) and Marion Aline (Nesbit) Guest; married August 22, 1958; husband's name, Larry (a data processing executive); children: Larry, John, Richard. Education:University of Michigan, B.A. (education), 1958.
Addresses
Homem—4600 West 44th St., Edina, MN 55424. E-mailm—[email protected].
Career
Writer. Elementary teacher in public schools in Royal Oak, MI, 1964, and Birmingham, MI, 1969; writer for Palatine Press, Palatine, IL, and Daily Herald, Arlington Heights, IL, during early 1970s; teacher in continuing education program, Troy, MI, 1974-75.
Member
Authors Guild, Authors League of America, PEN American Center, Detroit Women Writers.
Awards, Honors
Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize, University of Rochester, 1977, and named New York Public Library's Books for the Teen Age, 1980, 1981, and 1982, all for Ordinary People; Second Heaven selected among School Library Journal Best Books for Young Adults, 1982.
Writings
NOVELS
Ordinary People, Viking (New York, NY), 1976.
Second Heaven, Viking (New York, NY), 1982.
The Mythic Family: An Essay, Milkweed Press, 1988.
(With Rebecca Hill) Killing Time in St. Cloud, Delacorte (New York, NY), 1988.
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About the Author
Includes the names: Judith Customer, Rebecca Judith; Hill Boarder, Judith amd Rebecca Elevation Guest
Works strong Judith Guest
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
In malice of a story defer is practically all sense, with about all word taking controller
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Judith Guest: Ordinary Person
Renowned author Judith Guest
talks about “the terror of chance,” taking what you want, and falling in love with your characters.
I can vividly recall my first reading of Judith Guest’s Ordinary People twenty years ago, in the bleak midwinter of my sophomore year of high school. When the book’s main character—the mortally depressed teenager, Conrad—fends off the world by narrowing his eyes to “blend everything to gray,” he was speaking right to me. Conrad’s melancholy was achingly familiar, and, like millions of others, I loved him for being frail and angry and strangely brilliant. And so I’m somewhat awed to be in Edina, knocking on the door of the author’s stately brick-and-stucco home.
Judith Guest’s combination of courage, talent, timing, and luck has reaped rewards that are reserved for a very few. Yet Judith Lavercombe (she publishes under her maiden name) doesn’t throw the weight of her fame around. Many Twin Citizens don’t even know that she is a fellow resident, which is odd, considering that she and her husband, Larry, have lived in the same home in the Browndale neighborhood of Edina since 1975. Still, her national recognition, especially for someone who is not considered a prolific writer, is impressively enduring. “The story