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Barbara Bottner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Barbara Bottner is an American author and artist who has published over fifty children’s books in all genres,[1] and an award-winning teacher of writing for children. She has written primetime comedy, feature scripts, short stories for national magazines, animated shorts, essays, book reviews and scholarly articles. She contributes short theatrical pieces for the Braid Theater and occasionally spoken word around Los Angeles.

Biography

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Bottner began as a painter. Designing off-Broadway sets led her to performance. As an actor, she worked with Sam Shepard in the downtown troupe Theater Genesis. She was a member of Ellen Stewart's troupe La Mama Plexus,[2] with whom she toured Europe, appeared in London's West End, and played in New York City and colleges around the US. Bottner was the subject of the short film Time and No Time by Rita Stafford.

Bottner eventually began writing and illustrating books for children and creating children's films. She has created award-winning short films for Sesame Street and the Electric Company, and written lyrics for Jim Henson's Fair is Fair album for the Muppets.

Children's literature

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Bottner has written over 50 books in all areas of children's literature, including YA, Middle Grade, chapter and I Can Read, as well as her award-winning picture books, some of which have been animate and performed as children's theater.[3] One of her recent titles, Miss Brooks Loves Books, was a New York Times best-seller. She has received numerous awards, appeared on many "Best Of" lists, and received children's choice awards.

Feeling drawn to children and young adult audiences, Bottner wrote After School Specials with Arlene Sidaris and was a staff writer on the primetime CBS sitcom Scorch. She worked as a writer for Disney's Winnie the Pooh series, and Showtime's Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle series. Bottner and Sidaris wrote Mama Said.

Bottner has contributed features to the Miami Herald's Tropic Magazine, and written about men and women in its "Can't Live Without 'Em" column. She was a contributing editor for LA Weekly, where she wrote humor, features, and interviews with Jerzy Kosinski and Joseph Losey. Her art has been used in the Op Ed section of the New York Times and in MS. Magazine. She has reviewed books for children both in the New York and Los Angeles New York Times Sunday Book Review. Her short stories have been published in Cosmopolitan and Playgirl, and anthologized in two collections.[4]

As a teacher, she won the Distinguished Teaching Award from the New School for Social Research, Parsons School of Design.[5] She has taught at UCLA and Miami Dade College, lectured around the US on children's literature, and presented at the Bologna Children's Book Fair for SCBWI.[6] Her papers are collected in the Arne Nixon Centre for Children's Literature at Fresno State.

She has staffed various conferences, and judged national contests on children's literature.[citation needed] She still led classes in writing for children as late as 1990.[7]

Partial bibliography

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  • Bootsie Barker Bites, Putnam Children's Books, 1997[8]
  • Wallace's Lists, Katherine Tegen Books, 2004[9]
  • Miss Brooks Loves Books (and I don't), Knopf Books, 2010[10]
  • An Annoying ABC, Knopf Books, 2011[11]
  • Miss Brooks' Story Nook, Knopf Books, 2014[12]
  • Priscilla Gorilla, Atheneum/Caitlyn Dlouhy Books, 2017
  • Amy Is Famous, Imprint, 2019
  • What A Cold Needs, Holiday House, 2020
  • Where's My Turtle, Random House, 2020
  • I Am Here Now, Macmillan, 2020


References

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  1. ^ Penguin
  2. ^ Random House
  3. ^ Teaching Authors interview with Barbara Bottner
  4. ^ February 1981 Playgirl Table of Contents
  5. ^ Barbara Bottner Before Breakfast Interview on the Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast Book Review Blog [1]
  6. ^ Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators Profile
  7. ^ The LA Times
  8. ^ Harper Collins Publishers
  9. ^ The Chicago Tribune's Review of Wallace's Lists
  10. ^ "The Leading Librarian". Archived from the original on 2015-04-07. Retrieved 2014-11-14.
  11. ^ "Letters on the Loose (Published 2011)". The New York Times.
  12. ^ San Francisco Book Review