Tripti Joshi (Editor)

David Kherdian

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Name
  
David Kherdian


Role
  
Writer

David Kherdian httpsiytimgcomvifK0QjjfYkEUhqdefaultjpg

Awards
  
John Newbery Medal, Jane Addams Children's Book Award

Nominations
  
National Book Award for Children's Books (Hardcover)

Books
  
The Road from Home: The Story, Monkey, On a spaceship with Beel, Forgotten Bread, Come Back - Moon: Wit

NAASR Armenian Studies | David Kherdian | Forgotten Bread


David Kherdian (born 1931) is an Armenian-American writer, poet, and editor. He is known best for The Road from Home (Greenwillow Books, 1979), based on his mother's childhood—cataloged as biography by some libraries, as fiction by others.

Contents

Biography

Kherdian was born in Racine, Wisconsin, in 1931. In 1971 he married Nonny Hogrogian, an Armenian-American illustrator and writer. For two years they lived in Lyme Center, New Hampshire, where he was the state "poet-in-the-schools". The state university library is one repository for their works (in a joint collection). Hogrogian has illustrated some of his books, both poetry anthologies edited by Kherdian and his own writings. A new edition of The Road from Home was published with her illustrations in 1995.

Early years

David Kherdian's reputation is spread over all the genres he has worked in, from his many books, to the three journals he edited, as well as his three small presses he founded. He was the first to place ethnic-American writers within the canon of American literature, which he accomplished through anthologies and journals, and just as importantly with his own writings. As an editor, writer, and publisher, Kherdian has always been ahead of his time; he comes down the long intermittent line of mystic American poets, namely, Walt Whitman, Henry Thoreau, and Emily Dickinson—poets who are rarely valued in their lifetimes.

Awards

Kherdian won the 1979 Boston Globe–Horn Book Award for children's nonfiction, and he was the only runner-up for the 1980 Newbery Medal, recognizing The Road from Home (1979), about the childhood of his mother Veron Dumehjian before and during the Armenian Genocide. The book has been published in most European countries and in many other places, including Japan. It has been reissued several times in the United States and is increasingly read in middle schools throughout the country. In the sequel Finding Home (1981) she settles in America as a mail-order bride. It too is sometime cataloged as fiction.

Selected works

WorldCat member libraries report holding more than 20 books by Kherdian, of which The Road from Home is by far the most common.

  • A Bibliography of William Saroyan, 1934–1964 (1964)
  • Six Poets of the San Francisco Renaissance: Portraits and Checklists (1967)
  • Homage to Adana (1970)
  • Visions of America (1973)
  • Settling America: The Ethnic Expression of 14 Contemporary Poets (1974)
  • Poems Here and Now (1976)
  • Traveling America with Goday's Poets (1977)
  • The Dog Writes on the Window with His Nose and Other Poems (1977)
  • The Road from Home (1979) – biography in some library catalogs, fiction in others
  • Finding Home (1981) – continues The Road from Home
  • The Song in the Walnut Grove (1982) (Illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky)
  • Right Now (1983)
  • The Animal (1984)
  • Root River Run (1984)
  • Bridger: The Story of a Mountain Man (1987)
  • A Song for Uncle Harry (1989)
  • The Cat's Midsummer Jamboree (1990)
  • Feathers and Tails: Animal Fables from Around the World (1991)
  • On a Spaceship with Beelzebub: By a Grandson of Gurdjieff (1991)
  • Lullaby for Emily (1995)
  • Beat Voices: An Anthology of Beat Poetry (1995)
  • The Rose's Smile: Farizad of the Arabian Nights (1997)
  • The Golden Bracelet (1997)
  • I Called it Home (1997)
  • The Neighborhood Years (2000)
  • Come Back, Moon (2013)
  • Starting from San Francisco: A Life in Writing (2017)
  • References

    David Kherdian Wikipedia