Alida Malkus
Alida Malkus | |
---|---|
Born |
Genessee Valley of New York. | September 19, 1888
Died | September 27, 1976 88) | (aged
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | American |
Genre | Children's literature |
Notable awards |
Newbery Medal 1931 |
Alida Malkus (1888–1976) was an American author of children's novels. She was the eleventh child out of thirteen, she lived in Bay City and spent most of her time swimming and riding horses for entertainment. During high school at the age of thirteen she wrote articles for the school newspaper, she also wrote plays and enjoyed putting on productions for her neighborhood friends. Two years later, her mother was not well and had to move to San Francisco. During her trip she fell deeply in love with the desert and decided to live in New Mexico, where she spent a great deal of time with the Native Americans living in the region. This is where she developed her interest in Southwest Native Americans, Mayan ruins and other pre-Columbian civilizations which inspired most of her books.
One of her books, The Dark Star of Itza: The Story of a Pagan Princess, was on the Newbery Medal honor list.
Bibliography
- The Dark Star of Itza: The Story of A Pagan Princess (1930)
- The Spindle Imp and Other Tales of Maya Myth and Folk Lore (1931)
- Eastward Sweeps the Current: A Saga of the Polynesian Seafarers (1937)
- The Silver Llama (1939)
- The Citadel of a Hundred Stairways (1941)
- Constancia Lona (1947)
- The Story Of Louis Pasteur (1952)
- The Story of Good Queen Bess (1953)
- We Were There at the Battle of Gettysburg (1955)
- The Story of Winston Churchill (1957)
- The Sea and Its Rivers (1957)
- Through the Wall (1962)
- There Really Was a Hiawatha (1963)
- Animals of the High Andes (1966)
- The Story of Jacqueline Kennedy (1967)
- The Amazon: River of Promise (1970)
- Young Inca Prince (2000)
References
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