Marjorie van Heerden explained

Marjorie Hope van Heerden
Birth Date:8 October 1949
Nationality:South African
Education:Rustenburg School for GirlsStellenbosch UniversityMichaelis School of Fine Art
Organization:Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI)
Known For:Writing and Illustration of Children's book
Spouse:Johann van Heerden
Children:2

Marjorie Hope van Heerden (born October 8, 1949) is a South African writer and illustrator of children’s books. Since the publication of her first children’s picture book in 1983, van Heerden has been published as an illustrator or writer/illustrator in 33 languages in Africa, Britain, Europe, Asia, Canada and the USA.

Biography

Born in De Doorns to Alex and Marina van Niekerk (née Botha), Marjorie grew up on a table grapes farm outside De Doorns in the Hex River Valley near Cape Town in South Africa. She matriculated from Rustenburg School for Girls in Cape Town in 1967, studied Fine Art for one year at Stellenbosch University, and then went to the Michaelis School of Fine Art at the University of Cape Town for three years.

In 1973, she married Johann van Heerden and they had two children. In 2003, van Heerden started the South African chapter of the international Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI), based in Los Angeles. In 2000, she and a friend also started the SCBWI chapter in Greece. She is currently the co-regional advisor of the South African chapter.

Awards and honors

Marjorie van Heerden won the 2011 W.B. Mkhize Award, given annually by the Usiba Writers’ Guild, for the Zulu version of Lulama’s long way home (Uhambo LukaLulama Olude), a picture book she wrote and illustrated, published by Giraffe Books, an imprint of Pan MacMillan.

In 2012, van Heerden and author Alex D'Angelo won the M.E.R. Award (one of the Media24 Books Literary Awards) for the best-illustrated children’s book published in South Africa. In 2011, they won the award for Goblin Diaries: Apprenticed to the Red Witch, published by Tafelberg Publishers (SA).

This was the second time she has been awarded this award - the first time was in 2008 when she won it with author Wendy Hartmann for Nina and Little Duck, published in 2007 by Human & Rousseau (SA).

Children's books

As writer and illustrator

As illustrator

Educational children's books

As writer and illustrator

As illustrator

External links