Friday, September 7, 2007

“A Wrinkle in Time” author Madeleine L’Engle dies at 88


“A Wrinkle in Time” author Madeleine L’Engle died Thursday at the age of 88. According to her publicist, L’Engle died of natural causes at a nursing home in Litchfield.


L’Engle was a Newbery Medal winner and wrote more than 60 books including ‘A Wrinkle in Time,’ ‘A Ring of Endless Light,’ ‘A Wind in the Door,’ and ‘A Swiftly Tilting Planet.’


L’Engle was often labeled a children’s book author, but she insisted she never wrote for one particular age group. “In my dreams, I never have an age. I never write for any age group in mind. When people do, they tend to be tolerant and condescending and they don’t write as well as they can write,” she said in a 1993 interview.




“When you underestimate your audience, you’re cutting yourself off from your best work.”

A Wrinkle In Time - Her Best Work


A Wrinkle in Time is a children's fantasy novel by Madeleine L'Engle, written between 1959 and 1960 and published in 1962 after at least 26 rejections by publishers because it was, in L'Engle's words, "too different." The book went on to win a Newbery Medal, Sequoyah Book Award, and Lewis Carroll Shelf Award, and was runner-up for the Hans Christian Andersen Award. It is the first in L'Engle's series of books about the Murry and O'Keefe families.

The main character is Meg Murry, who is regarded by her peers and teachers as a bad-tempered underachiever. Her family recognizes her problem as a lack of emotional maturity but also regards her as being capable of great things. The family includes her beautiful scientist mother, her mysteriously missing scientist father, her five-year-old brother Charles Wallace Murry —a nascent super-genius— and ten-year-old twin athlete brothers Sandy and Dennys Murry.

Author Madeleine L'Engle
Cover artist Ellen Raskin (1960s editions),
Leo and Diane Dillon (current hardcover)
Country United States
Language English
Series Time Quartet
Genre(s) Young Adult, Science fiction novel
Publisher Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Publication date 1962
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 211 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-374-38613-7
Followed by A Wind in the Door

Profile


Madeleine was born on November 29th, 1918, and spent her formative years in New York City. Instead of her school work, she found that she would much rather be writing stories, poems and journals for herself, which was reflected in her grades (not the best). However, she was not discouraged.

At age 12, she moved to the French Alps with her parents and went to an English boarding school where, thankfully, her passion for writing continued to grow. She flourished during her high school years back in the United States at Ashley Hall in Charleston, South Carolina, vacationing with her mother in a rambling old beach cottage on a beautiful stretch of Florida Beach.

She went to Smith College and studied English with some wonderful teachers as she read the classics and continued her own creative writing. She graduated with honors and moved into a Greenwich Village apartment in New York. She worked in the theater, where Equity union pay and a flexible schedule afforded her the time to write! She published her first two novels during these years--A Small Rain and Ilsa--before meeting Hugh Franklin, her future husband, when she was an understudy in Anton Chekov's The Cherry Orchard. They married during The Joyous Season.

She had a baby girl and kept on writing, eventually moving to Connecticut to raise the family away from the city in a small dairy farm village with more cows than people. They bought a dead general store, and brought it to life for 9 years. They moved back to the city with three children, and Hugh revitalized his professional acting career. The family has kept the country house, Crosswicks, and continues to spend summers there.

As the years passed and the children grew, Madeleine continued to write and Hugh to act, and they to enjoy each other and life. Madeleine began her association with the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, where she has been the librarian and maintained an office for more than thirty years. After Hugh's death in 1986, it was her writing and lecturing that kept her going.

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