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Limited to: Words in TITLE "Sometimes you have to lie"
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Book Cover
Book
Title Sometimes you have to lie : the life and times of Louise Fitzhugh, renegade author of Harriet the Spy / Leslie Brody.
Publisher New York : Seal Press, 2020.
Copyright ©2020
Description viii, 335 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Edition First edition.


LOCATION CALL NUMBER VOL BARCODE LAST CHECKIN STATUS
 AG-Biography Room  92 FITZHUGH Nearby on shelf  30608000801708 03-31-21  AVAILABLE
 AM-1st Floor Stacks  B FITZHUGH BRO Nearby on shelf  35922003863929 (none)  AVAILABLE
 CI-Lower Stacks  BIO FITZHUGH L Nearby on shelf  31800003618721 (none)  AVAILABLE
 CS-Lower Level  B FITZHUGH Nearby on shelf  30619002592385 02-04-21  AVAILABLE
 DP-Biography  B Fitzhugh Nearby on shelf  32244202861783 03-03-21  AVAILABLE
 EC-Mezzanine  B FITZHUGH  062791007782002 08-18-22  AVAILABLE
 EH-Biography  B FITZHUGH BRO  30625002206173 09-22-21  AVAILABLE
 FM-Reading Room  B FITZHUGH  30629001005495 01-10-22  AVAILABLE
 HL-Main Reading Room  BIO FIT Nearby on shelf  30631000651733 (none)  AVAILABLE
 HM-Main Level  BIO FITZHUGH Nearby on shelf  31248008788257 05-19-21  AVAILABLE

BIBLIOGRAPHY Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary "The protagonist and anti-heroine of Louise Fitzhugh's masterpiece Harriet the Spy, first published first in 1964, continues to mesmerize generation after generation of readers. Harriet is an erratic, unsentimental, and endearing prototype--someone very like the woman who dreamed her up, author and artist Louise Fitzhugh. Born in 1928, Fitzhugh was raised in a wealthy home in segregated Memphis, and she escaped her cloistered world and made a beeline for New York as soon as she could. Her expanded milieu stretched from the lesbian bars of Greenwich Village to the dance clubs of Harlem, on to the resurgent artist studios of post-war New York, France, and Italy. Her circle of friends included artists like Maurice Sendak and playwrights like Lorraine Hansberry. In the 1960s, Fitzhugh wrote Harriet the Spy, and in doing so she introduced "new realism" into children's books-she launched a genre of children's books that allowed characters to experience authentic feelings and acknowledged topics that were formerly considered taboo. Fitzhugh's books are full of resistance: to liars, to conformity, to authority, and even (radically, for a children's author) to make-believe. As a commercial children's author and lesbian, Fitzhugh often had to disguise the nature of her most intimate relationships. She lived her life as a dissenter--a friend to underdogs, outsiders, and artists--and her masterpiece remains long after her death to influence and provoke new generations of readers. Harriet is massively influential among girls and women in contemporary culture; she is the missing link between Jo March and Scout Finch, and it's not surprising that writers have thought of her as a kind of patron saint for misfit writers and unfeminine girls. This lively, rich biography brings Harriet's creator into the frame, shedding new light on an extraordinary author and her marvelous creation"-- Provided by publisher.
Subject Fitzhugh, Louise.
Authors, American -- 20th century -- Biography.
Illustrators -- United States -- Biography.
Genre Biographies.
ISBN 9781580057691
1580057691
Record: