J. Allan Bosworth

Allan Bernard Bosworth (1925), using the pen-name J. Allan Bosworth, is an American author of children's adventure books.[1] His father, Allan Rucker Bosworth, is also a writer.

Bosworth began writing while still a radioman aboard USS Missouri. World War II had just ended, and the ship was on her long voyage home. A native Californian, he returned to San Francisco and took a job at the Chronicle. Ten years later, having published two novels and a few dozen short stories, he left the newspaper to begin writing on a full time basis.[2] He lived in Salem, Virginia, the setting for All the Dark Places.

His best-known books are White Water, Still Water, about a boy stranded downriver by his raft, and All the Dark Places, about a boy lost in an Appalachian cave.[3] White Water, Still Water was included by School Library Journal as one of the 26 best books of spring in 1966.[2][4] Before developing the wilderness adventure theme, Bosworth wrote Voices in the Meadow, a fable of meadowland creatures facing dangerous predators.[5]

Bibliography

References

  1. LC authority file
  2. 1 2 Inside cover of his book All the Dark Places
  3. According to WorldCat, as of November 2015, these books were held by 354 and 341 libraries respectively. Both are also available at the Open Library.
  4. The Author Speaks : selected PW interviews, 1967-1976 New York : Bowker, 1977
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 J. Allan Bosworth at WorldCat

External links

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