Dorothy Joan Harris Explained

Dorothy Joan Harris
Birth Date:14 February 1931
Birth Place:Kobe, Japan
Occupation:Writer
Nationality:Canadian
Alma Mater:University of Toronto
Genre:Children's literature
Children:2
Parents:Hubert Langley
Alice Langley

Dorothy Joan Harris (born February 14, 1931) is a Japanese-born Canadian writer living in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. She mainly writes children's books.[1]

Biography

The daughter of Hubert and Alice Langley, she was born Dorothy Joan Langley in Kobe and came with her family to St. Catharines, Ontario, in 1938. She received a degree in modern languages from the University of Toronto in 1952 and went on to teach elementary school in France and Japan. She returned to Toronto in 1954 and married Alan Harris in 1955; the couple had two children. From 1955 to 1961, Harris was an editor for Copp Clark Publishers. From 1977 to 1996, she was a public library assistant.[1] [2]

She contributed to the 1999 anthology Too Young to Fight: Memories from our Youth During World War, which received the BolognaRagazzi Award at the Bologna Children's Book Fair. Her 2004 book A very unusual dog was nominated for a Chocolate Lily Award.[3]

Selected works

[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dorothy Joan Harris . Writers' Union of Canada.
  2. Book: Harris, Dorothy Joan . Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series . 2005.
  3. Web site: Dorothy Joan Harris Fonds . Toronto Public Library.
  4. Book: A Very Unusual Dog . . 2004 . 978-0439937184 . Illustrated by Kim Lafave.