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Shirley Hughes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shirley Hughes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shirley Hughes
Born July 16, 1927 (1927-07-16) (age 80)
Wirral Peninsula, United Kingdom
Occupation Freelance writer and illustrator
Nationality British
Writing period 1960s – present
Genres Children's

Shirley Hughes (born 16 July 1927, Wirral, United Kingdom) is an English author and illustrator. She has written more than fifty books which have sold more than 11.5 million copies, and illustrated over two hundred. She currently lives in London.[1][2][3]

Contents

[edit] Early life

Hughes grew up in West Kirby, in the Wirral. She has stated that during childhood she was inspired by artists like Arthur Rackham and W. Heath Robinson, and later the cinema and the Walker Art Gallery.[4] She was educated at West Kirby High School, and studied drawing and costume design at the Liverpool School of Art, then the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art in Oxford.[2] Whilst at Oxford, she was encouraged to work in the picture book format and to make lithographic illustrations. Soon she was commissioned by Collins. After art school Hughes moved to Notting Hill, London[5] and married John Vulliamy, an architect and etcher, and they had three children together, including the journalist Ed Vulliamy and a daughter who is also a children's book illustrator, Clara Vulliamy.[6]

[edit] Work

Hughes began her work during the 1950s and 1960s by illustrating other books, such as My Naughty Little Sister by Dorothy Edwards and The Bell Family by Noel Streatfeild.[5] Her first work as an author was Lucy & Tom's Day, first published in 1960. This story proved popular, and so Lucy and Tom became a series.[1] She went on to write over fifty more stories, including a series about a young boy named Alfie, and his sister Annie-Rose.[6]

[edit] Awards

Her 1977 story, Dogger, was the first to be published widely abroad.[4] This story also won her the Kate Greenaway Medal the same year. In 1984 Hughes won the Eleanor Farjeon award for distinguished services to children's literature. In 1999, she was awarded an OBE, and in 2000 she was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. In 2003 she won the Kate Greenaway Medal again for Ella's Big Chance and was also granted an Honorary Fellowship by Liverpool John Moores University.[5]

[edit] References

Languages


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