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Robert Cormier

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Occupation
  
Writer

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Robert Cormier


Period
  
1962–2000

Nationality
  
American

Awards
  
Phoenix Award

Robert Cormier Robert Cormier obituary and death notice on InMemoriam

Born
  
January 17, 1925 Leominster, Massachusetts, USA (
1925-01-17
)

Genre
  
Realist young adult (YA) novels, crime fiction, thrillers

Notable awards
  
Margaret A. Edwards Award 1991 Phoenix Award 1997

Children
  
Roberta Sullivan ("Bobbie") Peter J. Cormier (1 son) Chris Cormier Hayes Renee E. Wheeler

Died
  
November 2, 2000, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Spouse
  
Constance Senay (m. ?–2000)

Movies
  
The Chocolate War, I Am the Cheese, Un comedien sans paradoxe

Books
  
The Chocolate War, I Am the Cheese, After the First Death, Heroes, We All Fall Down

Similar People
  
Keith Gordon, Jean‑Claude Deret, Jonathan D Krane

Robert cormier classic author of books discusses his thought with interviewer tim podell


Robert Edmund Cormier (January 17, 1925 – November 2, 2000) was an American author, columnist and reporter, known for his deeply pessimistic, sad books. His most popular works include I Am the Cheese, After the First Death, We All Fall Down and The Chocolate War, all of which have won awards. The Chocolate War was challenged in multiple libraries. His books often are concerned with themes such as abuse, mental illness, violence, revenge, betrayal and conspiracy. In most of his novels, the protagonists do not win.

Contents

Robert Cormier Robert Cormier Biography Childhood Life Achievements

Nonfiction project memories of my father robert cormier


Early life and education

Robert Cormier httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenff5Cor

Robert Cormier was born in 1925 to Lucien Joseph and Irma M. Cormier, in Leominster, Massachusetts, in the French-Canadian section of the town called French Hill. He was the second of eight children. His family moved frequently to afford rent, but never left his hometown. Even when he was much older and owned a summer home, it was only 19 mi (31 km) away from Leominster. In a few of his books, Cormier's hometown of Leominster became the fictional town of Monument, and its village of French Hill became Frenchtown. The nearby city of Fitchburg became Wickburg.

Robert Cormier TeensRandom Authors

Cormier attended St. Cecilia's Parochial School, a private Catholic school. He began writing when he was in the first grade and was praised at school for his poetry. He first realized his aspiration to become a writer in 7th grade, when he was encouraged by a nun to write a poem. He attended Leominster High School, graduating as the president of his class.

Robert Cormier Robert Cormier Penguin Random House

As a freshman at Fitchburg State College, he had his first short story published when a college professor, Florence Conlon, without his knowledge sent one of his stories to a national Catholic magazine The Sign for $75.

Career

Robert Cormier TOP 25 QUOTES BY ROBERT CORMIER of 67 AZ Quotes

Cormier began his professional writing career scripting radio commercials. He eventually became an award-winning journalist. Even though he became widely known, he never stopped writing for his local newspaper, the Fitchburg Sentinel.

Robert Cormier Robert Cormier Biography Childhood Life Achievements Timeline

Cormier became a full-time writer after the success of his first adult novel for teenagers, Now and at the Hour (1960); others followed, such as The Chocolate War and After the First Death. He was concerned with the problems facing young people in modern society, which was reflected in his novels. He soon established a reputation as a brilliant and uncompromising writer. His awards include the Margaret A. Edwards Award of the Young Adult Services Division of the American Library Associationa lifetime award that recognizes a particular body of work that provides young adults with a window through which they can view the world, and which will help them to grow and understand themselves and their role in society. Cormier won the annual award in 1991 citing The Chocolate War; I Am the Cheese; and After the First Death.

The Chocolate War has been challenged in various libraries and schools for its language and its depictions of sexual activity, secret societies, and anarchic students. Between 1990 and 2000 it was the fourth most-frequently challenged book in the US, according to the American Library Association.

Awards

I Am the Cheese (1977), which was named to several contemporary book lists, won the 1997 Phoenix Award from the Children's Literature Association as the best English-language children's book that did not win a major award when it was originally published twenty years earlier. That is named for the mythical bird phoenix, which is reborn from its ashes, to suggest the book's rise from obscurity.

By that time Cormier had won the 1991 Edwards Award citing I Am the Cheese as one of three 1974 to 1979 books "taken to heart by young adults over a period of years". The American Library Association determined that "Cormier's brilliantly crafted and troubling novels have achieved the status of classics in young adult literature."

Personal life

Cormier died in 2000 due to complications from a blood clot.

Published works

Nonfiction
  • I Have Words to Spend (1991)
  • Fiction
    Novels except as stated
  • Now and at the Hour (1960)
  • A Little Raw on Monday Mornings (1963)
  • Take Me Where the Good Times Are (1965)
  • The Chocolate War (1974)
  • I Am the Cheese (1977)
  • After the First Death (1979)
  • Eight Plus One (1980), collection
  • The Bumblebee Flies Anyway (1983)
  • Beyond The Chocolate War (1985)
  • Fade (1988)
  • Other Bells for Us to Ring (1990); UK title, Darcy (1991)
  • We All Fall Down (1991)
  • Tunes for Bears to Dance To (1992)
  • In the Middle of the Night (1995)
  • Tenderness (1997)
  • Heroes (1998)
  • Frenchtown Summer (1999)
  • The Rag and Bone Shop (2000)
  • References

    Robert Cormier Wikipedia