Pam Muñoz Ryan

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Pam Muñoz Ryan (born 25 December 1951) is an American latino author. She grew up with half her family from Mexico, and the other half from Oklahoma. Her ethnicity is varied. She admits to being Spanish, Mexican, Basque, Italian, and Oklahoman. [1]Having a big family, there were always uncles, aunts, and grandparents around, so she was used to a noisy house.[2]

Growing up in San Joaquin Valley, California, she recalled the sweltering summer days. "My house didn't have air conditioning so I rode my bike to the local library. I read books in the cool air; a relief from the heat."[citation needed]

Pam Munoz Ryan knew very young that she wanted a career that centered around books. She thought that meant being a teacher and then an administrator.[3]She was finally encouraged by a professor while in graduate school and began writing."It took me a number or years to make that leap of faith." she states when commenting on becoming a full time writer. That came in 1994 after she published her first picture book that differed so much from the writing she had done for adults.[4]

She is now the author of the bestselling book Esperanza Rising and her newest novel Becoming Naomi Leon. Paint the Wind

The inspiration for Esperanza came from her Grandmother. An immigrant from Mexico, she battled inter-family complications and the death of her father. She faced the appalling prejudice that was considered the norm at the time against her Hispanic heritage.

Becoming Naomi Leon came from a 1997 visit to the Mexican city of Oaxaca to an annual Christmas time event called "The Night of the Radishes". In the novel, the side plots revolve around Naomi's school: Buena Vista Elementary. The playground teasing to Naomi's handicapped and crippled brother and Naomi's encounter to Mimi Messmaker whispering "Trailer Trash" as she is passing by is realistic and sends a slight wake-up call to the reader. Naomi's mother is another tag of social issue where Naomi sees Mrs. Leon (or Ms. Skyla Jones as she likes to be called by her maiden name) sneaks bottles of booze, slaps her across the face, and openly calls Owen a bad bargain by pointing out his odd habits and pinched, croaky voice.

Ryan comments that she enjoys little know facts about celebrities. She believes that her strong female protagonists have stories that deserve to be told. Two of her muses are Eleanor Roosevelt and Amelia Earhart.[5]Pam Munoz Ryan has also written picture books such as Amelia and Eleanor Go for a Ride. ' Her other novels include Riding Freedom which has won numerous awards.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Pam Muñoz Ryan: "A Confluence of Rivers" By Katherine Pierpont, Senior Editor from Teaching K-8
  2. ^ Insert footnote text here
  3. ^ Pam Muñoz Ryan: Biography
  4. ^ Insert footnote text herehttp://www.teachingk-8.com/archives/author_interview/pam_muoz_ryan_a_confluence_of_rivers_by_katherine_pierpont_senior_editor.html
  5. ^ Reading Rockets : A video interview with Pam Muñoz Ryan