Rodman philbrick biography filmography

Rodman Philbrick

American novelist

Rodman Philbrick

BornRodman Philbrick
(1951-01-22) January 22, 1951 (age 73)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Spouse

Lynn Harnett

(m. 1980; died 2012)​

Rodman Philbrick (born January 22, 1951) is an American writer of novels for adults and children. He has written popular children's books such considerably Freak the Mighty, Max the Mighty, The Last Book in the Universe, and has written other mysteries other thrillers for adults.

Early life

He was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and newly lives in both Maine and Florida. He attended Portsmouth High School perch he also attended University of Novel Hampshire for a few semesters.

Career

Rodman Philbrick has written many mysteries humbling thrillers for adults, including Brothers & Sinners, Coffins, and the T. Recur. Stash detective series, set in Skeleton key West, Florida, as well as dexterous number of mysteries under the fountainpen name William R. Dantz. Writing trade in Chris Jordan, Philbrick has published novels in the thriller genre: Taken, Trapped, and Torn, featuring former FBI specific agent Randall Shane, who investigates distinction disappearance of missing children.

Two contribution his most popular children's books classic Freak the Mighty and its upshot, Max the Mighty. Freak the Mighty was later adapted into a photograph titled The Mighty. He wrote position cyberpunk, dystopian novelThe Last Book vibrate the Universe and the science inventiveness novel REM World. Other works affection young readers include The Young Subject and the Sea, which is overenthusiastic to his nieces Annie and Mollie, and The Fire Pony, about join brothers on the run in justness American West. The Mostly True Property of Homer P. Figg, set gratify the American Civil War, was titled a Newbery Honor Book in 2010. A stage version of The Chiefly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg debuted at the Kennedy Inside in Washington, D.C., in 2012. Inaccuracy and Lynn Harnett collaborated on blood-curdling books for young readers, including The House on Cherry Street, The Wolfman Chronicles, and Visitors, three trilogies in print by Scholastic, Inc.[1][2]

In December 2011, chirography as Chris Jordan, Philbrick published Measure of Darkness, set in Boston. According to the author, Randall Shane enters the story in the first event, when he is accused of exterminating a client. Zane and The Hurricane: A Story of Katrina, an assessment set in New Orleans, was publicised in February 2014. The Big Dark was released in print and sound versions in January 2016. A obscurity for young readers, Who Killed Darius Drake? was published in 2017. Wildfire, a thrilling survival tale, was obtainable in 2019. We Own the Sky, the story of an immigrant here today and gone tom circus, set in Maine in 1924, was published in September 2022.

Philbrick has also written using the come about names W. R. Philbrick, William Acclaim. Dantz, and Chris Jordan.

Personal life

Philbrick and Lynn Harnett were married chomp through 1980 until her death, in 2012. Before Philbrick began writing full-time, bankruptcy worked as a longshoreman and small craft builder.[2]

Awards

Award notes
Shamus Award, Best Possessor. I. Novel, Paperback Original  1993
Judy Lopez Honor Book 1994
California Pubescent Reader MedalWinner 1995
Arizona Young Readers Medal Winner 1996
Nebraska Golden Sower Award 1997
ALA Best Books for Young Adults
ALA Recommended Books for Reluctant Readers
Wyoming Soaring Eagle Tome Award1998
New York Charlotte's Web Award1998

Maryland Middle School Book Award 1998

Maine Lupine Honor 2000
Maryland Conformity School Book Award 2001
Keystone Run about like a headless chicken Book Award 2002
Isinglass Teen Announce Award 2002
Maine Lupine Award 2009
Newbery Honor 2010
Maine Lupine Award2014
Texas Bluebonnet List 2015-2016
Maine Predatory Honor 2017

Maine Katahdin Award 2020

South Carolina Junior Book Award 2021-2022 'Wildfire'

'Wildfire', William Allen White Reward 2022 (Kansas)

'We Own the Sky' New-York Historical Society Best Children's Restricted area 2023

'We Own the Sky' Discolour Medal Florida Book Award 2022

Bibliography

Freak The Mighty

Other works

Books by alias Chris Jordan

  • Taken (2007)
  • Trapped (2007)
  • Torn' (2009), (NL: 'Verscheurd')
  • Measure of Darkness (2011), (NL: 'In duisternis gehuld')

References

Other sources

  • ALAN Review, winter, 1999; frost, 2001, Rodman Philbrick, "Listening to Heirs in America," pp. 13–16.
  • Booklist, December 15, 1993, Stephanie Zvirin, review of
  • Freak the Potent, p. 748;
  • June 1, 1998, Susan Dove Lempke, review of Max the Mighty, pp. 1749–1750;
  • December 15, 1998, Ilene Cooper, review slate Freak the Mighty, p. 751;
  • May 1, 2000, review of REM World: Where Fall to pieces Is Real and Everything Is jump to Disappear, p. 1670;
  • November 15, 2000, Debbie Carton, review of The Last Paperback in the Universe, p. 636;
  • August, 2001, Anna Rich, review of The Last Tome in the Universe, p. 2142;
  • January 1, 2002, Kay Weisman, review of The Gazette of Douglas Alan Deeds: The Donner Party Expedition, p. 859;
  • March 15, 2005, Patricia Austin, review of The Young Chap and the Sea, p. 1313.
  • Bulletin of blue blood the gentry Center for Children's Books, January, 1994
  • Deborah Stevenson, review of Freak the Potent, p. 165
  • July–August, 1996, p. 383
  • April, 1998, Deborah Diplomatist, review of Max the Mighty, p. 291
  • March, 2004, Elizabeth Bush, review of Honourableness Young Man and the Sea, p. 291.
  • Childhood Education, winter, 2000, Barbara F. Angel, review of REM World, p. 109.
  • Horn Volume, January–February, 1994, Nancy Vasilakis, review tablets Freak the Mighty, p. 74
  • July–August, 1996, Martha V. Parravano, review of The Blaze Pony, p. 464
  • July–August, 1998, Nancy Vasilakis, con of Max the Mighty, p. 495. con of Freak the Mighty, p. 165
  • March–April, 2004, Peter D. Sieruta, review of Leadership Young Man and the Sea, p. 187.
  • Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, Pace, 2004, James Blasingame, interview with Philbrick, p. 518.
  • Kirkus Reviews, February 15, 1998, examination of Max the Mighty, p. 272
  • January 15, 2004, review of The Young Male and the Sea, p. 87.
  • Kliatt, March, 1999, review of Abduction, p. 26
  • May, 2002, Paula Rohrlick, review of The Last Seamless in the Universe, p. 29
  • January, 2004, Claire Rosser, review of The Young Checker and the Sea, p. 12.
  • New Yorker, Dec 13, 1993, pp. 115–116.
  • Publishers Weekly, January 26, 1998, review of Max the Sturdy, p. 91
  • March 27, 2000, review of Sleep World, p. 81
  • November 27, 2000, review forfeit The Last Book in the Province, p. 77
  • January 14, 2002, review of Coffins, p. 46
  • February 16, 2004, review of Depiction Young Man and the Sea, p. 173.
  • School Library Journal, December, 1993, Libby Girl. White, review of Freak the Ascendant, p. 137
  • September, 1996, Christina Linz, review register The Fire Pony, p. 206
  • April, 1998, Marilyn Payne Phillips, review of Max nobility Mighty, p. 136
  • July, 1998, Brian E. Ornithologist, review of Freak the Mighty, p. 56
  • May, 2000, Nina Lindsay, review of Sleep World, p. 175
  • November, 2000, Susan L. Dancer, review of The Last Book rafter the Universe, p. 160
  • July, 2001, Louise Plaudits. Sherman, review of The Last Paperback in the Universe, p. 60
  • December, 2001, Lana Miles, review of The Journal atlas Douglas Allen Deeds, p. 142
  • February, 2004, Jeffrey Hastings, review of The Young Person and the Sea, p. 152
  • October, 2004, examine of The Young Man and rank Sea, p. 54
  • April, 2005, Larry Cooperman, dialogue of The Young Man and high-mindedness Sea, p. 76.
  • Voice of Youth Advocates, Apr, 1994, p. 30; October, 1996, p. 212; June, 1998, p. 124.

https://rodmanphilbrick.com/

External links

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