Louis Sachar | |
Birth Date: | 20 March 1954 |
Birth Place: | East Meadow, New York, U.S. |
Education: |
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Genre: | Children's fiction |
Children: | 1 |
Notableworks: |
Louis Sachar (;[1] born March 20, 1954) is an American young-adult mystery-comedy author. He is best known for the Wayside School series and the novel Holes.
Holes won the 1998 U.S. National Book Award for Young People's Literature[2] and the 1999 Newbery Medal for the year's "most distinguished contribution to American literature for children".[3] In 2013, it was ranked sixth among all children's novels in a survey published by School Library Journal.[4]
Sachar was born on March 20, 1954 at Meadowbrook Hospital in East Meadow, New York. As a child, he attended Hebrew school and Sunday school.[5] [6] After graduating from Tustin High School, Sachar attended Antioch College for a semester before transferring to University of California, Berkeley, during which time he began helping at an elementary school in return for three college credits.[7] Sachar later recalled,
Sachar graduated from UC Berkeley in 1976 with a degree in economics, and began working on Sideways Stories From Wayside School, a children's book set at an elementary school with supernatural elements. Although the book's students were named after children from Hillside and there is a presumably autobiographical character named "Louis the Yard Teacher,"[7] Sachar has said that he draws very little from personal experience, stating that "my personal experiences are kind of boring. I have to make up what I put in my books."[8]
Sachar wrote the book at night over the course of nine months, during which he worked during the day in a Connecticut sweater warehouse.[7] After being fired from the warehouse, Sachar decided to go to law school, around which time Sideways Stories From Wayside School was accepted for publication. The book was released in 1978; though it was not widely distributed and subsequently did not sell very well, Sachar began to accumulate a fan base among young readers.[9] Sachar graduated from University of California, Hastings College of the Law in 1980 and did part-time legal work while continuing to write children's books.[10] By 1989, his books were selling well enough that Sachar was able to begin writing full-time.[7]
Sachar married Carla Askew,[11] an elementary school counselor, in 1985. They live in Austin, Texas, and have a daughter, Sherre, born January 19, 1987. Sachar has mentioned both his wife and daughter in his books; Carla was the inspiration for the counselor in There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom (1988)[7] and for Stanley's lawyer in Holes.
In 2015, when asked whether he thought children had changed over the years, Sachar responded: "I've actually been writing since 1976, and my first book is still in print and doing very well. So, no, I don't think kids have changed."[12]
On April 11, 2003, Disney's film adaptation of Holes was released, which earned $71.4 million worldwide. Sachar himself wrote the screenplay, at the request of the film's director Andrew Davis, and has a brief on-screen cameo during one of the flashback scenes.[13] On November 19, 2005, the Wayside School series was adapted into an animated direct-to-video special. Two years later, it became a television series with two seasons, airing on the Canadian Teletoon and Nickelodeon in the U.S.