Walter Dean Myers Biography – life Story, Career, Awards, Age, Height
Author of over seventy youngsters’s and younger grownup books, Walter Dean Myers was born Walter Milton Myers on August 12, 1937, in Martinsburg, West Virginia. At age two, Myers’s mother, Mary Green, died, and Florence Brown Dean, his father’s ex-spouse and her husband, Herbert Dean, raised him. Growing up on 121st and Morningside within the Harlem neighborhood of New York City, Myers, a stricken teens, struggled with a speech impediment however cherished to read. Myers attended P.S. 125 and JHS 143, however dropped out of Stuyvesant High School two times; as soon as in 1952, and once more in 1954. After serving within the United States Army from 1957 to 1960, Myers labored on the Harlem Post Office and the New York State Department of Labor; he additionally attended instructions at City College of New York, Columbia University, and at SUNY Empire State College, wherein he graduated in 1984.
Encouraged with the aid of John Oliver Killens, Myers published his first poem inside the Delta Review in 1962. Myers wrote for guys’s adventure magazines, then received a Writers Digest contest sponsored by using the Council for Interracial Books for Children with his tale Where Does The Day Go?, in 1969. Writing first for small youngsters, after which for teenagers, Myers’s themes ranged from sports, to science fiction, to biography, to African and African American records, to delusion, to adventure and even to thriller. Highlights of Myers’s prolific and award triumphing profession include: The Young Landlords (1979), Hoops (1981), The Legend of Tarik (ALA Best Books for Children, 1981), Motown and Didi: A Love Story (Coretta Scott King Award, 1984), The Outside Shot (1984), Fallen Angels (Coretta Scott King Award, 1988), Now Is Your Time! The African American Struggle for Freedom (Coretta Scott King Award, ALA Best Books, Notable Books for Children, 1992), Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary (Best Books for Young Adults Award, ALA, 1993), Somewhere In Darkness (Newberry Honor Book, 1993), Monster (Michael L. Printz Award, 2000), Bad Boy: A Memoir (2001), Shooter (2004) and Autobiography of My Dead Brother (2005) about his brother’s dying in Vietnam. Myers also wrote a biography of John Robinson entitled The Brown Condor; Robinson became an African American pilot and a hero of the Italo Ethiopian War.

