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James Haskins

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For the politician and cabinet minister from Botswana, see James G. Haskins. American author (1941–2005)
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James Haskins
Born(1941-09-19)September 19, 1941
Demopolis, Alabama, U.S.
DiedJuly 6, 2005(2005-07-06) (aged 63)
U.S.
OccupationNonfiction writer
EducationGeorgetown University (BA)
University of Alabama (BS)
University of New Mexico (MA)
GenreBiography, Children's literature, Young adult fiction
Notable worksThe Story of Stevie Wonder
Lena Horne
Count Your Way series

James Haskins (September 19, 1941 – July 6, 2005) was an American author with more than 100 books for both adults and children. Many of his books highlight the achievements of African Americans and cover the history and culture of Africa and the African American experience. His work also included many biographical subjects, ranging from Lena Horne and Hank Aaron to Scatman Crothers and Malcolm X. Most of his writings were for young people. He wrote on a great variety of subjects that introduced young people to the language and cultures of other continents, especially Africa.

Biography

Haskins was born in Demopolis, Alabama and spent his childhood in a household with many children. He received his high school education in Boston, Massachusetts. He received a B.A. degree from Georgetown University in 1960, a B.S. degree from Alabama State University in 1962, and a M.A. degree from the University of New Mexico in 1963.

After graduation, before he decided to become a teacher, Haskins moved to New York City and worked as a stock trader on Wall Street. He taught music and special education classes in Harlem. His first book, Diary of a Harlem Schoolteacher, was a result of his experience. He was a professor of English at the University of Florida and lived in New York City.

Haskins died in 2005 of complications from emphysema.

Early life

Haskins is an Alabama Native who was born in the year of 1941 he grew up in a loving community with his aunts and uncles. Haskins's hometown is Demopolis,Alabama growing up he experienced segregation in the public school system. Haskins would have to make the best out of what he could with scarce academic and financial resources. Haskins's family would buy supermarket encyclopedias to help him quench his thirst for knowledge. His parents' white boss would allow Haskins to use her library card to supply his need for learning to read, when Haskins turned twelve years old his mother and he relocated to Boston, Massachusetts many of his teachers were Harvard professors. This school was prestigious and Haskins was one of twenty-five African American students that attended this school. Haskins developed his love for teaching in Boston, he also played the trumpet and had a passion for music as well. Haskins obtained his education from many different institutions across the country from Alabama, Boston, Washington D.C., and New Mexico. During his time in Alabama Haskins attended school at Alabama State University around the period of 1959-1960. It was here where Haskins would begin to develop his liking for social activism. Haskins would participate in sit-in demonstrations to protest for African-American rights. Later Haskins would assist Rosa Parks by helping her publish her book with him as the co-author. He also has recordings from his interview with Rosa Parks he and his fellow peers would be labeled as rabble-rousers for trying to sit in the white-only section of the lunch rooms. Haskins and others would be expelled for their actions. He would end up leaving ASU because he was granted a scholarship to Georgetown after obtaining a bachelor's degree in psychology he would return to Alabama to complete yet another bachelor's degree this time in the arts of history. Once he completed that he would go off to the University of New Mexico to complete his master's in social psychology.

Later years

Haskins would later spend time in the state of New York he became a stock trader which was something he did not enjoy. He later would turn his talents to teaching in the borough of Harlem he kept a diary of his encounters as a teacher and would later go on to publish it. It was titled, "Diary of A Harlem School Teacher". When Haskins decided to leave Harlem he would become a professor at Staten Island Community College. Seven years had passed and around this time Jim had decided to teach at the University of Florida as an English professor. Haskins always preferred to be labeled a teacher over being labeled a writer, Haskins would achieve several literary awards for his novels.

Writing

Haskins' picture books, with many brightly colored pictures and few words, were geared to young children just learning to read. They tend to highlight the achievements of African Americans in society. The characters in his stories cover the gamut of African American role models, from Rosa Parks to the black members of the Hannibal Guards, a military organization in Pittsburgh during the Civil War.

Haskins' 1977 picture book The Cotton Club, featuring gangsters, jilted love, and pre-prohibition gangsters, was used as inspiration for the 1984 film of the same name.

In 1998, his young adult book African American Entrepreneurs was published by Jossey-Bass in English. The book followed the success of his first work, Voodoo and Hoodoo: The Craft as Revealed by Traditional Practitioners, published some 20 years prior.

Awards

Several of Haskins' books were Coretta Scott King Author Honor titles, including Barbara Jordan, Lena Horne, and Black Dance in America. He won the Coretta Scott King Award for The Story of Stevie Wonder in 1977. Bricktop was chosen by the English-Speaking Union to be a Book-Across-the-Sea in 1983. Black Music in America won the 1988 Carter G. Woodson Book Award of the National Council for the Social Studies. He would go on to win the award four more times. His four-book Count Your Way series (Arab World, China, Japan, and Russia) won the Alabama Library Association Award for best work for children in 1988. In 1994, he was presented the Washington Post Children's Book Guide Award.

Selected bibliography

  • Diary of a Harlem Schoolteacher (Grove Press, 1969)
  • Profiles in Black Power (1972)
  • Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback (Macmillan Publishing, 1973)
  • The Story of Stevie Wonder (1975)
  • Pele: A Biography (1976)
  • Scott Joplin: The Man Who Made Ragtime (1978)
  • Voodoo and Hoodoo: The Craft as Revealed by Traditional Practitioners (1978)
  • James Van DerZee: The Picture Takin' Man (1980)
  • Bricktop (1983)
  • Lena Horne (1983)
  • Black Music in America: A History Through Its People (1987)
  • Count Your Way series (1987)
  • Mr. Bojangles: The Biography of Bill Robinson (Morrow, 1988)
  • I Have a Dream: The Life and Works of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1992)
  • One More River to Cross: The Stories of Twelve Black Americans (Scholastic Corporation, 1992)
  • The March on Washington (1994)
  • From Afar to Zulu: A Dictionary of African Cultures (with Joanna Biondi) (1995)
  • African American Entrepreneurs (Jossey-Bass, 1998)
  • Black Stars: African American Military Heroes (1998)
  • Great Ghost Stories (Morrow, 1998) (Compiled by Peter Glassman, Illustrated by Barry Moser)
  • Rosa Parks: My Story (with Rosa Parks) (1999)
  • Conjure Times: Black Magicians in America (with Kathleen Benson) (2001)

References

  1. ^ Watkins, Mel. "James Haskins, an Author on Black History, Dies at 63," New York Times (July 11, 2005). Accessed April 28, 2009.
  2. Turcotte, Florence. "Guides @ UF: James Haskins: Biography". guides.uflib.ufl.edu. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
  3. Children's Literature: Meet Authors & Illustrators
  4. "Coretta Scott King Book Awards - All Recipients, 1970-Present | Coretta Scott King Roundtable". www.ala.org. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
  5. "Carter G. Woodson Award Winners 1974 to Present". AALBC.com, the African American Literature Book Club. Retrieved October 28, 2024.

https://doi.org/10.2307/4443231 "Review: Diary of a Harlem School Teacher, by Jim Haskins". The American Biology Teacher. 32 (8): 503–503. doi:10.2307/4443231. ISSN 0002-7685.

Bibliography

External links

‹ The template below (Carter G. Woodson Book Award winners) is being considered for deletion. See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus. ›
Carter G. Woodson Book Award winners
General winners (1974–1988)
  • Rosa Parks by Eloise Greenfield (1974)
  • Make a Joyful Noise Unto the Lord: The Life of Mahalia Jackson, Queen of the Gospel Singers by Jesse C. Jackson (1975)
  • Dragonwings by Laurence Yep (1976)
  • The Trouble They Seen by Dorothy Sterling (1977)
  • The Biography of Daniel Inouye by Jan Goodsell (1978)
  • Native American Testimony: An Anthology of Indian and White Relations edited by Peter Nabokov (1979)
  • War Cry on a Prayer Feather: Prose and Poetry of the Ute by Nancy Wood (1980)
  • The Chinese Americans by Milton Meltzer (1981)
  • Coming to North America from Mexico, Cuba and Puerto Rico by Susan Carver and Paula McGuire (1982)
  • Morning Star, Black Sun by Brent Ashabranner (1983)
  • Mexico and the United States by E.B. Fincher (1984)
  • To Live in Two Worlds: American Indian Youth Today by Brent Ashabranner (1985)
  • Dark Harvest: Migrant Farmworkers in America by Brent Ashabranner (1986)
  • Happily May I Walk by Arlene Hirschfelder (1987)
  • Black Music in America: A History Through Its People by James Haskins (1988)
Secondary level winners (grades 7–12, since 1989)
  • Marian Anderson by Charles Patterson (1989)
  • Paul Robeson by Rebecca Larsen (1990)
  • Sorrow's Kitchen: The Life and Folklore of Zora Neale Hurston by Mary E. Lyons (1991)
  • Native American Doctor: The Story of Susan LaFlesche Picotte by Jeri Ferris (1992)
  • Mississippi Challenge by Mildred Pitts Walter (1993)
  • The March on Washington by James Haskins (1994)
  • Till Victory is Won: Black Soldiers in the Civil War by Zak Mettger (1995)
  • A Fence Away from Freedom: Japanese Americans and World War II by Ellen Levine (1996)
  • The Harlem Renaissance by Jim Haskins (1997)
  • Langston Hughes by Milton Meltzer (1998)
  • Edmonia Lewis: Wildfire in Marble by Rinna Evelyn Wolfe (1999)
  • Princess Ka'iulani: Hope of a Nation, Heart of a People by Sharon Linnea (2000)
  • Tatan'ka Iyota'ke: Sitting Bull and His World by Albert Marrin (2001)
  • Multiethnic Teens and Cultural Identity by Barbara C. Cruz (2002)
  • The "Mississippi Burning" Civil Rights Murder Conspiracy Trial: a Headline Court Case by Harvey Fireside (2003)
  • Early Black Reformers by James Tackach (2004)
  • The Civil Rights Act of 1964 edited by Robert H. Mayer (2005)
  • No Easy Answers: Bayard Rustin and the Civil Rights Movement by Calvin Craig Miller (2006)
  • Dear Miss Breed: True Stories of the Japanese-American Incarceration During World War II and a Librarian Who Made a Difference by Joanne Oppenheim (2007)
  • Don't Throw Away Your Stick Till You Cross the River: The Journey of an Ordinary Man by Vincent Collin Beach with Anni Beach (2008)
  • Reaching Out by Francisco Jiménez (2009)
  • Denied, Detained, Deported: Stories From the Dark Side of American Immigration by Ann Bausum (2010)
  • An Unspeakable Crime: The Prosecution and Persecution of Leo Frank by Elaine M. Alphin (2011)
  • Black and White: The Confrontation between Reverend Fred L. Shuttlesworth and Eugene "Bull" Connors by Larry Dane Brimner (2012)
  • Stolen into Slavery the True Story of Solomon Northup, Free Black Man by Judith Fradin and Dennis Fradin (2013)
  • (none in 2014)
  • The Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny, and the Fight for Civil Rights by Steve Sheinkin (2015)
  • Passenger on the Pearl: The True Story of Emily Edmonson's Flight from Slavery by Winifred Conkling (2016)
  • March (Trilogy) by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin and Nate Powell (2017)
  • Twelve Days in May—Freedom Ride 1961 by Larry Dane Brimner (2018)
  • A Few Red Drops by Claire Hartfield (2019)
  • Infinite Hope: A Black Artist's Journey from World War II to Peace by Ashley Bryan (2020)
  • Lifting as We Climb: Black Women's Battle for the Ballot Box by Evette Dionne (2021)
  • Race Against Time by Sandra Neil Wallace and Rich Wallace (2022)
  • Days of Infamy: How a Century of Bigotry Led to Japanese American Internment by Lawrence Goldstone (2023)
  • Family Style: Memories of an American from Vietnam by Thien Pham (2024)
Middle level winners (grades 5–8, since 2001)
  • Let it Shine: Stories of Black Women Freedom Fighters by Andrea Davis Pinkney (2001)
  • Prince Estabrook: Slave and Soldier by Alice Hinkel (2002)
  • Remembering Manzanar: Life in a Japanese Relocation Camp by Michael L. Cooper (2003)
  • In America's Shadow by Kimberly Komatsu and Kaleigh Komatsu (2004)
  • The Voice that Challenged a Nation: Marian Anderson and the Struggle for Equal Rights by Russell Freedman (2005)
  • César Chávez: A Voice for Farmworkers by Bárbara Cruz (2006)
  • Freedom Walkers: The Story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott by Russell Freedman (2007)
  • Black and White Airmen: Their True History by John Fleischman (2008)
  • Drama of African-American History: The Rise of Jim Crow by James Haskins and Kathleen Benson with Virginia Schomp (2009)
  • Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice by Phillip Hoose (2010)
  • (none in 2011)
  • Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein by Susan Goldman Rubin (2012)
  • Marching to the Mountaintop: How Poverty, Labor Fights, and Civil Rights Set the Stage for Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Final Hours by Ann Bausum (2013)
  • Emancipation Proclamation: Lincoln and the Dawn of Liberty by Tonya Bolden (2014)
  • The Girl from the Tar Paper School: Barbara Rose Johns and the Advent of the Civil Rights Movement by Teri Kanefield (2015)
  • (none in 2016)
  • (none in 2017)
  • Fighting for Justice—Fred Korematsu Speaks Up by Laura Atkins and Stan Yogi (2018)
  • America Border Culture Dreamer: The Young Immigrant Experience From A to Z by Wendy Ewald (2019)
  • Infinite Hope: A Black Artist's Journey from World War II to Peace by Ashley Bryan (2020)
  • Black Heroes of the Wild West by James Otis Smith (2021)
  • Unspeakable: The Tulsa Race Massacre by Carole Boston Weatherford (2022)
  • Overground Railroad: The Green Book and The Roots of Black Travel in America (The Young Adult Adaptation) by Candacy Taylor (2023)
  • Contenders: Two Native Baseball Players, One World Series by Traci Sorell (2024)
Elementary level winners (grades K–6, since 1989)
  • Walking the Road to Freedom by Jeri Ferris (1989)
  • In Two Worlds: A Yup’ik Eskimo Family by Aylette Jenness and Alice Rivers (1990)
  • Shirley Chisolm by Catherine Scheader (1991)
  • The Last Princess: The Story of Princess Ka’iulani of Hawai’i by Fay Stanley (1992)
  • Madam C.J. Walker by Patricia and Fredrick McKissack (1993)
  • Starting Home: The Story of Horace Pippin, Painter by Mary E. Lyons (1994)
  • What I Had Was Singing: The Story of Marian Anderson by Jeri Ferris (1995)
  • Songs from the Loom: A Navajo Girl Learns to Weave by Monty Roessel (1996)
  • Ramadan by Suhaib Hamid Ghazi (1997)
  • Leon's Story by Leon Walter Tillage (1998)
  • Story Painter: The Life of Jacob Lawrence by John Duggleby (1999)
  • Through My Eyes by Ruby Bridges (2000)
  • The Sound that Jazz Makes by Carole Boston Weatherford (2001)
  • Coming Home: A Story of Josh Gibson, Baseball's Greatest Home Run Hitter by Nanette Mellage (2002)
  • Cesar Chavez: The Struggle for Justice / Cesar Chavez: La lucha por la justicia by Richard Griswold del Castillo (2003)
  • Sacagawea by Liselotte Erdrich (2004)
  • Jim Thorpe's Bright Path by Joseph Bruchac (2005)
  • Let Them Play by Margot Theis Raven (2006)
  • John Lewis in the Lead: A Story of the Civil Rights Movement by Jim Haskins and Kathleen Benson (2007)
  • Louis Sockalexis: Native American Baseball Pioneer by Bill Wise (2008)
  • Lincoln and Douglass: An American Friendship by Nikki Giovanni (2009)
  • Shining Star: The Anna May Wong Story by Paula Yoo (2010)
  • Sit In: How Four Friends Stood Up By Sitting Down by Andrea Davis Pinkney (2011)
  • Red Bird Sings: The Story of Zitkala-Ša, Native American Author, Musician, and Activist adapted by Gina Capaldi and Q. L. Pearce (2012)
  • Fifty Cents and a Dream: Young Booker T. Washington by Jabari Asim (2013)
  • Hey Charleston!: The True Story of the Jenkins Orphanage Band by Anne Rockwell (2014)
  • Separate Is Never Equal: Sylvia Mendez and Her Family's Fight for Desegregation by Duncan Tonatiuh (2015)
  • Poet: The Remarkable Story of George Moses Horton by Don Tate; The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch by Chris Barton (2016)
  • Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook Up the National Park Service by Annette Bay Pimentel (2017)
  • The Youngest Marcher—The Story of Audrey Faye Hendricks, a Young Civil Rights Activist by Cynthia Levinson (2018)
  • The Vast Wonder of the World: Biologist Ernest Everett Just by Mélina Mangal (2019)
  • The Undefeated by Kwame Alexander (2020)
  • William Still and His Freedom Stories by Don Tate (2021)
  • I Am an American: The Wong Kim Ark Story by Martha Brockenbrough and Grace Lin (2022)
  • Where We Come From by Diane Wilson, Sun Yung Shin, Shannon Gibney, and John Coy (2023)
  • My Powerful Hair by Carole Lindstrom (2024)
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