

Deborah Wiles was born in Alabama into an Air Force family and spent her growing-up summers in a small Mississippi town with an extended family full of Southern characters. Today she writes about them and they live on in her stories.
Deborah is the first children's book author to be named Writer-in-Residence at Thurber House, James Thurber's boyhood home in Columbus, Ohio. She received the Ezra Jack Keats New Writer Award from the New York Public Library and the Keats Foundation in 2002 and is the 2004 recipient of the PEN/Phyllis Reynolds Naylor Working Writer Fellowship. She holds an MFA in Writing from Vermont College and taught "Writing Techniques for Teachers" at Towson University in Maryland until she moved to Atlanta last June. She also taught writing in the MFA program at Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Her first novel, "Love Ruby Lavender," was an ALA Notable Children's Book, a Children's Book Sense 76 Pick, and a New York Public Library Book for Reading and Sharing. The book has also been nominated for twenty-six state book award reading lists, voted on by children. She has written two picture books, "One Wide Sky" (Harcourt, 2003), a Children’s Book of the Month Club selection, and "Freedom Summer" (Simon & Schuster, 2001), winner of numerous awards including the Coretta Scott King/Steptoe award for illustrator Jerome Lagarrigue. Deborah’s 2005 novel, "Each Little Bird That Sings," won the Bank Street Fiction Award for 2005, a Golden Kite Honor Award, a 2005 E.B. White Read Aloud Award winner and is a 2005 National Book Award finalist.
Deborah lives in Atlanta, Georgia where she avoids the traffic, climbs Stone Mountain, and grows the world's most beautiful zinnias.
Book(s):
• The Aurora County All-Stars (Harcourt Children's Books, 2007)
Appearance(s):
• Sunday, 3:30-4:00, Children's

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