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Born:
July 28,
1932 -
Dayton,
Ohio -
United
States
of
America.
Current
Home:
Providence,
Rhode
Island -
United
States
of
America.
I was
born and
raised
in Ohio.
During
my
childhood,
I spent
most of
my time
drawing
and
reading
fairy
tales
and
myths.
My
mother,
an
amateur
landscape
and
portrait
painter,
gave me
art
lessons.
She
always
made
sure I
had
enough
paper,
paint,
pencils,
and
encouragement.
I grew
up
wanting
only to
be an
illustrator.
I
studied
art at
Laurel
School
in
Cleveland
and at
Smith
College.
Right
after
graduation,
I
married
Samuel
Fisher
Babbitt,
an
academic
administrator.
I spent
the next
ten
years in
Connecticut,
Tennessee,
and
Washington,
D.C.,
raising
our
children,
Christopher,
Tom, and
Lucy.
My
husband
took
time out
from his
academic
career
to write
a novel
and
discovered
that he
didn't
enjoy
the
long,
lonely
hours
that
writing
demanded.
My
sister
produced
a comic
novel,
which
required
substantial
rewriting.
I
learned
three
valuable
things
from
observing
my
husband's
and
sister's
forays
into the
writer's
world:
You have
to give
writing
your
full
attention.
You have
to like
the
revision
process.
And you
have to
like to
be alone.
But it
was
years
before I
put any
of this
to good
use.
In 1966,
my
husband
and I
collaborated
on a
children's
book
called
The
Forty-ninth
Magician
— he
wrote it
and I
illustrated
it. With
encouragement
from our
editor
at
Farrar,
Straus &
Giroux,
I
continued
producing
children's
books
even
after my
husband
became
too busy
to write
the
stories.
I write
for
children
because
I am
interested
in
fantasy
and the
possibilities
for
experience
of all
kinds
before
the time
of
compromise.
I
believe
that
children
are far
more
perceptive
and wise
than
American
books
give
them
credit
for
being. |