Lloyd Alexander
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceLloyd Chudley Alexander (January 30, 1924 - May 17, 2007) was the American author of more than forty books, mostly fantasy novels for children and adolescents, as well as several adult books. His most famous contribution to the field of children's literature is the fantasy series The Chronicles of Prydain. The first two books in this series formed the basis of the Disney animated film The Black Cauldron. The concluding book of the series, The High King, was awarded the Newbery Medal in 1969. Alexander's other books have also won the National Book Award and the American Book Award.
Personal life
Alexander was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1924 and grew up in the suburb of Drexel Hill. His father was a stockbroker and their family was greatly affected by the Great Depression. According to Alexander, his parents didn't read books and only bought them from the Salvation Army "to fill up empty shelves."Alexander graduated from Upper Darby High School in 1940, and was inducted into the school's Wall of Fame in 1995. He decided he wanted to be a writer at age 15, but his parents were so upset that they placed him at Haverford College just down the road from home (although he left after completing only a single term). Looking for adventure, he served in the US Army in World War II, where he rose to be a staff sergeant in intelligence and counterintelligence after he trained in Wales, which would become the setting of so many of his books. Alexander then attended the University of Paris, where he met Janine Denni. They were married in 1946. Alexander died May 17, 2007, two weeks after the death of his wife of sixty-one years. He is buried at Arlington Cemetery Co in Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania. His daughter, Madeline Khalil, died in 1990.
Writings
Alexander's most well-known novels are within the genre of children's literature, with The Chronicles of Prydain being his most famous work. The five-volume series of children's fantasy novels detail the adventures of a young man named Taran, who is awarded the honor of Assistant Pig-Keeper but dreams of being a grand hero, and his companions Princess Eilonwy, Fflewddur Fflam the wandering bard and king, a feral yet gentle creature called Gurgi, and a dwarf named Doli. The book focuses on Taran's progression from youth to maturity, with the series being loosely inspired by Welsh mythology and the Mabinogion. The first two books in this series formed the basis of the Disney animated film The Black Cauldron.
Alexander's other major fiction series are the Westmark trilogy, about a printer's apprentice involved in political intrigue in a European kingdom, and the Vesper Holly series, about a Philadelphia orphan who travels around a 19th century fantasy world.
Alexander's last novel, The Golden Dream of Carlo Chuchio, was published in August 2007. "I have finished my life work," Alexander said about the book before he died. The Dictionary of Literary Biography said Alexander's books had "the special depth and insight provided by characters who not only act, but think, feel and struggle with the same kinds of problems that confuse and trouble people in the twentieth century."
In describing the influences on his writing, Alexander once said, "Shakespeare, Dickens, Mark Twain and so many others were my dearest friends and greatest teachers. I loved all the world's mythologies: King Arthur was one of my heroes."
Awards
Alexander's book "The Marvelous Misadventures of Sebastian," about an 18th-century fiddler, won a 1971 National Book Award. He also won a 1982 American Book Award for Westmark.
The fifth book in Alexander's The Chronicles of Prydain series, The High King won the 1969 Newbery Medal and was a finalist for both the National Book Award and the American Book Award. The second book in the series, The Black Cauldron, was a 1966 Newbery Honor book. The fourth book in the series, Taran Wanderer, was a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year.
Among his other awards were the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for The Fortune-Tellers (1992).
Bibliography
The Chronicles of Prydain
- * The Black Cauldron (1965) - Winner of the 1966 Newbery Honor
- * Taran Wanderer (1967)
- * The High King (1968) - Winner of the 1969 Newbery Medal
The Westmark Trilogy
- * Westmark (1981)
- * The Kestrel (1982)
- * The Beggar Queen (1984)
The Vesper Holly series
- * The Illyrian Adventure (1986)
- * The El Dorado Adventure (1987)
- * The Drackenberg Adventure (1988)
- * The Jedera Adventure (1989)
- * The Philadelphia Adventure (1990)
- * The Xanadu Adventure (2005)
Other
- * And Let the Credit Go (1955) (first published book)
- * My Five Tigers (1956)
- * August Bondi: Border Hawk (1958)
- * Aaron Lopez: The Flagship Hope (1960)
- * Fifty Years in the Doghouse (1963)
- * The Truthful Harp (1967)
- * The Marvelous Misadventures of Sebastian (1970)
- * The King's Fountain (1971)
- * The Four Donkeys (1972)
- * The Wizard in the Tree (1974)
- * The First Two Lives of Lukas-Kasha (1978)
- * The Remarkable Journey of Prince Jen (1991)
- * The Fortune-Tellers (1992)
- * The Arkadians (1995)
- * The House Gobbaleen (1995)
- * The Iron Ring (1997)
- * Gypsy Rizka (1999)
- * How the Cat Swallowed Thunder (2000)
- * The Gawgon and the Boy (2001) [released in the UK as "The Fantastical Adventures of the Invisible Boy"]
- * The Rope Trick (2002)
- * Dream-of-Jade: The Emperor's Cat (2005)
- * The Golden Dream of Carlo Chuchio (2007)
Translations
- * "The Diary of Antoine Roquentin" (John Lehmann, 1949). This was the first English translation of the celebrated existentialist novel "La Nausée" by Jean-Paul Sartre (Gallimard 1938).
References
External links
- The Chronicles of Prydain
- Lloyd Alexander on Fantasy
- Penguin USA: Lloyd Alexander's biography
- Upper Darby High School Wall of Fame
- Lloyd Alexander from Kidsreads.com
- Facts about Lloyd Alexander at Arlington Cemetery
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