Jump to content

Robert J. Burch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert J. Burch
Born(1925-06-25)June 25, 1925
Fayette County, Georgia, US
DiedDecember 25, 2007(2007-12-25) (aged 82)
Fayette County, Georgia
OccupationWriter
NationalityAmerican
Period1960–2007
GenreChildren's literature, realist young-adult novels, historical fiction
Notable works
  • Queenie Peavy (1966)
  • Ida Early Comes Over the Mountain (1980)
Notable awardsPhoenix Award
1986

Robert J. Burch (June 25, 1925 – December 25, 2007) was an American writer of 19 children's books whose readers are "usually young adolescents".[1] Many of his stories are based on his childhood experiences in rural Georgia during the Great Depression.[2]

He was born in Fayette County, Georgia, and spent the majority of his life there. Robert J. Burch Elementary School in Tyrone is named for him.[2] In 1943 he joined the army.

Career

[edit]

Burch began writing in New York City in the early 1960s.

According to Dictionary of Literary Biography, his best books feature "realistic details of country and small-town life in middle and northern Georgia" during the Great Depression, the setting of his own childhood.[1] "His books are infused with his genial, optimistic view of life while maintaining a realistic, nonsentimental, serious, and moralistic approach."[1]

Awards

[edit]

Burch and Queenie Peavy won the second annual Phoenix Award from the Children's Literature Association in 1986, recognizing the best children's book published twenty years earlier that did not win a major award.[3] Burch received four Georgia Children's Book Awards and in 2007 the inaugural W. Porter Kellam Lifetime Achievement Award (after a University of Georgia Library director) for outstanding contributions to literary life in Georgia.[2] In 2009, Burch was inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame.[4]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Robert J(oseph) Burch Biography". Dictionary of Literary Biography. Reprint at BookRags (bookrags.com). Purchase required; opening lines retrieved 2013-03-02.
  2. ^ a b c "UGA announces Georgia Writers Hall of Fame inductees" Archived 2012-05-07 at the Wayback Machine. January 20, 2009. Franklin News. The University of Georgia. Retrieved 2013-03-02.
  3. ^ "Phoenix Award Brochure 2012"[permanent dead link]. Children's Literature Association. Retrieved 2013-03-02.
    See also the current homepage, "Phoenix Award" Archived 2012-03-20 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ "Robert Burch". Georgia Writers Hall of Fame. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  • "Fayette's noted author Robert Burch dies at 82". Archived from the original on August 24, 2007. Retrieved September 20, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). Trey Alverson. Fayette County News. December 27, 2007. Nominally archived 2007-08-24[!]. Retrieved 2013-08-25.
[edit]