ELOISE GREENFIELD

BIOGRAPHY I BOOKS I PRESENTATIONS I BOOK ORDERING

Eloise Greenfield was born in Parmele, North Carolina, on May 17, 1929. The second oldest of five children, she moved, as an infant, with her family to Washington, D.C. She studied piano as a child and teenager. She loved

music, movies, and books. As a young wife

and mother in her early twenties, while working as a clerk-typist at the U. S. Patent Office, Ms. Greenfield began a search for satisfying work. She found it in writing.

 

After several years of study and rejections

from publishers, Ms. Greenfield had her first poem published in the Hartford Times in 1962. Her first book was published in 1972. She is now the author of more than 40 books for children -- poetry, biography, picture books and older fiction. She says her mission is twofold: (1) to contribute to the development of a large body of African American literature for children and (2) to continue to fill her life with the joy of creating with words.

 

Ms. Greenfield has received many honors, including the Coretta Scott King Award for Africa Dream and the Carter G. Woodson Award for Rosa Parks. For Honey, I Love and Other Love Poems, she received the 1990 Recognition of Merit Award, presented by the George G. Stone Center for Children's Books. She has received the Boston Globe/Horn Book Honor Award for Childtimes: A Three-Generation Memoir, written with her mother, Lessie Jones Little; the Hope S. Dean Award from the Foundation for Children's Literature; the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children, given for a body of work to a living American poet; the Hurston/Wright Foundation's North Star Award for lifetime achievement; and a lifetime achievement award from the Moonstone Celebration of Black Writing. In 1999, Ms Greenfield was inducted into the National Literary Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent. Furthermore, In the Land of Words was named a 2005 Notable Children's Book in the Language Arts (Children's Literature Assembly/NCTE). When the Horses Ride By and The Friendly Four  were chosen for the CCBC's (Cooperative Children's Book Center's) 2007 Choices. The Friendly Four was further included on the 2007 Texas 2x2 Reading List for ages 2 to grades 2. For her body of work, she also received the 2007 Wheatley Book Award, sponsored by Quarterly Black Books Review as part of the Harlem Book Fair.

Eloise Greenfield enjoys working with and for young people. Through her work, she wants to give them words that nourish the spirit -- "words to love, to grow on." She has said, "I love working with words. Sometimes they come almost as if by magic. Other times, I feel a kind of pain in struggling to find the right ones. But I keep struggling because I want to do my best and I want children to have the best."

 

Ms. Greenfield lives in Washington, D. C. She is the mother of a son and a daughter and the grandmother of four. Read more about Ms. Greenfield's work and life.

SPECIAL NOTICE FOR FEBRUARY 2008

In 2008, Ms. Greenfield was selected for a Vanguard Spotlight by The Brown Bookshelf, who interviews a number of authors. These interviews appear on thebrownbookshelf.com, and Ms. Greenfield's will appear in February 2008. There is also a beautifully designed poster of all the authors interviewed that can be downloaded from their website.