Kate Banks Explained

Kate Banks
Birth Name:Katherine Anne Banks
Birth Date:13 February 1960
Birth Place:Farmington, Maine, United States
Death Place:Basel, Switzerland
Occupation:Writer

Katherine Anne Banks (February 13, 1960 – February 24, 2024) was an American children's writer. Her books, The Night Worker, won the 2001 Charlotte Zolotow Award,[1] And If the Moon Could Talk won the 1998 Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for best picture book.[2] Dillon Dillon was a finalist for the 2002 Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Young Adult Fiction. Howie Bowles, Secret Agent was nominated for the 2000 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Juvenile.[3] Max’s Math won the 2016 Mathical Book Prize.[4]

Early life

Kate Banks was born on February 13, 1960, in Farmington, Maine.[5] Her father was a history professor at the University of Maine who was killed in a botched robbery in 1979.[5] Banks said that the grief she experienced after her father's murder influenced the themes of her novels.[5]

Career

While a student at Wellesley College, Kate Banks applied for an internship at the Atlantic Monthly Press, where she worked for two years in the children's books department.[5] In 1984, she was hired by editor Frances Foster to work as her assistant at Knopf.[6] [7] Banks worked with Foster for five years before leaving to become a writer, with Foster editing her books for the following couple of decades.

Banks came up with the idea for her first book, Alphabet Soup, while still working with Foster, who encouraged her to write it down and paired the author with Peter Sís, an illustrator looking for work who had just arrived in New York.[8]

Personal life

Banks and her husband, Pierluigi Mezzomo, had two sons.[5] They lived in Italy for several years before moving to France.[5]

Banks lived with several major health issues. She was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome in her twenties and had chronic pain from complications in childbirth.[5] She also had mast cell activation syndrome, which left her unable to pursue treatment for neuroendocrine cancer, which she was diagnosed with in 2022.[5]

Death

Banks died through assisted suicide in Basel, Switzerland, on February 24, 2024, at the age of 64.[5] [9]

Books

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Charlotte Zolotow Award Books . www.education.wisc.edu . https://web.archive.org/web/20070226150822/http://www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/books/detailListBooks.asp?idBookLists=221 . February 26, 2007 . dead .
  2. Web site: Boston Globe–Horn Book Awards: Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present . The Horn Book . https://web.archive.org/web/20121214080902/http://archive.hbook.com/bghb/past/past.asp . December 14, 2012 . dead .
  3. http://www.theedgars.com/edgarsDB/index.php The Edgars Database
  4. Web site: Max's Math. June 7, 2021. Mathical Book Prize. en-US.
  5. Web site: Kate Banks, Children's Author Who Wrote About Grief, Dies at 64 . Williams . Alex . . March 27, 2024 . https://archive.today/20240418092717/https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/27/books/kate-banks-dead.html . April 18, 2024 . live .
  6. Web site: Roback . Diane . Frances Foster Remembered . . March 2, 2024 . en . June 24, 2014.
  7. Web site: Kate Banks: Children's Book Author . Saravalle . Eleonora . January 8, 2018 . www.okaybutwhatdoyoudo.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20240302122714/https://www.okaybutwhatdoyoudo.com/home/kate-banks . March 2, 2024 . dead .
  8. Schröder . Monika . Talking with Kate Banks . . September 2013 . 23 . 1 . 32–37.
  9. Web site: Obituary: Kate Banks . . Maughan . Shannon . March 5, 2024 .