Birdsall, Jeanne 1951–
Birdsall, Jeanne 1951–
Personal
Born 1951; married William Diehl, 1994; children: two stepchildren. Education: Attended Boston University, 1969; attended California College of Arts and Crafts, 1972.
Addresses
Home—Northampton, MA. Agent—Barbara S. Kouts Literary Agency, P.O. Box 560, Bellport, NY 11713.
Career
Children's book author.
Awards, Honors
Booklist Top Ten First Novels for Youth inclusion, School Library Journal Best Books designation, and National Book Award for Young People's Literature, all 2005, all for The Penderwicks.
Writings
The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy, Knopf (New York, NY), 2005.
Adaptations
The Penderwicks was adapted as an audiobook, Listening Library, 2006.
Work in Progress
A sequel to The Penderwicks.
Sidelights
Inspired by the novels of Edward Eager and E. Nesbit, Jeanne Birdsall's 2005 book The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy was described as "so retro, it's almost radical" by School Library Journal interviewer Rick Margolis. The story of four sisters who encounter adventure during a summer vacation spent on a cottage in the Berkshire mountains, the novel surprised many—including its author—when it earned first-time writer Birdsall the National Book Award for Young People's Literature in 2005.
Growing up in Strafford, Pennsylvania, Birdsall had a childhood that was scarred by alcoholism, and reading became a way for her to escape into another world. Her love of childrens' literature has stayed with her throughout her life. Although in her primary career she has excelled at the visual arts and has become well known for her art photography, at age forty-two she decided to fulfill a childhood goal, and channel some creative energy into writing a book that carried on the legacy of Nesbit and Eager. The Penderwicks was the result.
In The Penderwicks readers meet the Penderwick sisters: twelve-year-old Rosalind, eleven-year-old Skye, ten-year-old Jane, and four-year-old Batty. Together with their widowed father, a loving but rather absent-minded botany professor, the sisters and the family dog vacation in a cozy cottage on a country estate called Arundel hall. With few children living nearby, the girls soon befriend Jeffrey, the lonely son of the hall's upper-crusty owner, Mrs. Tifton. As the summer passes, the children encounter a series of adventures in which the magic comes from their imaginative view of their novel surroundings. Jeffrey's doomed fate—to be sent to a dreaded military school—is something to be liberated from, while the usually dependable Rosalind suddenly finds herself doe-eyed over the hall's handsome young gardener. Feisty Skye battles the restrictions placed on the children by the snooty Mrs. Tifton, while Jane narrates the children's activities with a wry yet humorously melodramatic eye.
Praise for The Penderwicks was wide-ranging, many critics acknowledging Birdsall's nod to a pantheon of writers that range from Louisa May Alcott and Frances Hodgson Burnett to Elizabeth Enright and Lemony Snicket. "Nostalgic but never stale, this fresh, satisfying novel is like a cool breeze on a summer's day," concluded Horn Book contributor Carolyn Shute, describing The Penderwicks as "suffused with affectionate humor." In her "timeless tale," Birdsall captures "spirited family dynamics and repartee," wrote a contributor to Publishers Weekly, the critic adding that the Penderwick sisters exhibit "delightfully diverse personalities" that "propel the plot." Praising the author's "superb writing style," B. Allison Gray wrote in School Library Journal that Birdsall's "wonderful, humorous book … features characters whom readers will immediately love," characters who engage in what a Kirkus Reviews writer described as "the sorts of lively plots and pastoral pastimes we don't read much about these days."
In her writing Birdsall openly pays homage to the books she loved as a child: escapist fiction featuring a band of curious children, a daunting challenge, and an everyday world that is transformed by the imagination into a place rife with the possibility of adventure. When she first approached publishers, she was advised to add a strong dose of adolescent strife, and make her story reflect what publishers maintained is demanded by modern readers weaned on so-called "problem novels." Fortunately, her manuscript fell into the hands of a more open-minded editor at Knopf, and The Penderwicks was ultimately published with relatively minor changes. As Birdsall explained to Rick Margolis in School Library Journal, "People are saying children who lead traumatic lives need books that validate the trauma, and I'm not saying they're wrong. But I also think because it worked so well for me, that there are children who lead difficult lives who need to understand that it doesn't have to be so bad. I also think that there are a lot of children out there who are still leading wonderful lives, and … they need to have something to read too."
Working on a sequel to her award-winning novel, Birdsall makes her home in Western Massachusetts, together with her husband and assorted cats, rabbits, a dog, and even a snail. As she remarked of writing in an interview on her home page: "Most authors do work very hard. I know that I do, partly because I write slowly, so I have to write almost every day to make any progress at all. But mostly I work hard because I'm happiest when I'm writing."
Biographical and Critical Sources
PERIODICALS
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, September, 2005, Timnah Card, review of The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy, p. 9.
Horn Book, July-August, 2005, Carolyn Shute, review of The Penderwicks, p. 465.
Kirkus Reviews, June 1, 2005, review of The Penderwicks, p. 633.
Publishers Weekly, July 25, 2005, review of The Pender-wicks, p. 77.
School Library Journal, July, 2005, B. Allison Gray, review of The Penderwicks, p. 95; January, 2006, Rick Margolis, "Seems like Old Times" (interview), p. 60.
ONLINE
Boston Globe Online, http://www.boston.com/ (December 12, 2005), David Mehegan, "A Storybook Beginning."
Jeanne Birdsall Home Page, http://www.jeannebirdsall.com (April 26, 2006).
R. Michelson Galleries Web site, http://www.rmichelson.com/ (April 26, 2006), "Jeanne Birdsall."