Betty Baker Explained

Betty Lou Baker
Birth Date:20 June 1928
Birth Place:Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Death Place:Tucson, Arizona
Occupation:Novelist
Language:English
Nationality:American
Genre:historical fiction, young adult literature
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Awards:Western Heritage Award (1964, 1971), Spur Award (1968)
Years Active:1962–1984

Betty Lou Baker (1928-1987) was an American writer of young adult literature, who specialized in historical novels about the Southwestern United States. "The best of her books display a remarkable sensitivity to and appreciation of Native peoples and cultures".[1]

Life

Betty Lou Baker was born in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, on June 20, 1928, the daughter of Robert Weidler Baker and Mary Baker, née Wentling. She attended school in Orange, New Jersey. In 1947 she married Robert George Venturo.[2]

Baker wrote her first novel, Little Runner of the Longhouse (1962), for her son, Christopher,[1] inspired by a boring school history book to try to write something more engaging.[2]

Baker and Venturo divorced in 1965. She continued to write, training herself to write at least five thousand words a day.[2]

Baker won the Western Heritage Award in 1964 and 1971, and the Spur Award of the Western Writers of America in 1968.[1]

She died November 6, 1987, in Tucson, Arizona.[2] Her papers are held by UCLA Special Collections.[3]

Works

Novels
Non-fiction

Notes and References

  1. Book: Thomas J. Morrissey. Emmanuel Sampath Nelson. M. Daphne Kutzer. Writers of Multicultural Fiction for Young Adults: A Bio-critical Sourcebook. 1996. Greenwood Press. 978-0-313-29331-3. 29–36. Betty Lou Baker (1928-1987).
  2. Web site: Betty Baker . Pennsylvania Center for the Book . 2018 . 19 February 2021 .
  3. Web site: Finding Aid for the Betty Baker Papers, 1962-1969 . OInline Archive of California . 19 February 2021 .