Shirlee Taylor Haizlip
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Shirlee Taylor Haizlip (b. 1937) is an American non-fiction author. She has written three books: The Sweeter the Juice, A Memoir in Black and White, In the Garden of Our Dreams, co-authored with her husband, Harold C. Haizlip, and Finding Grace. The Sweeter the Juice, A Memoir in Black and White is the first autobiographical book to openly examine the issues of passing in a non-fiction way.
[edit] Biography
Haizlip was born in Stratford, Connecticut. She had two sisters and one brother. Her parents were Julian A. Taylor, a Baptist minister, and Margaret Morris Taylor, both natives of Washington D. C. Haizlip grew up in Ansonia, Connecticut. She graduated from Wellesley College, taught sociology at Tufts University and studied Urban Planning at the Harvard University School of Design. Haizlip was the first woman to manage a CBS television affiliate, WBNB-TV in St.Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands. From there she went to WNET TV, Channel 13 in New York City and became one of its corporate officers. Haizlip moved to Los Angeles, California in l989 to become the National Director of the National Center for Film and Video Preservation at the American Film Institute, an organization which advocated and distributed funding for more than 139 film archives around the country. Haizlip left the Preservation Center to begin writing her book, The Sweeter the Juice. Haizlip married Harold C. Haizlip in 1959 and the couple had two daughters. Haizlip is a frequent lecturer at colleges and popular speakers' venues. Haizlip has also written book reviews for the San Francisco Chronicle and the Wellesley Alumnae Magazine. Her articles have appeared in American Heritage and American Legacy. She has written editorials for the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times.
[edit] Books
In the Garden of Our Dreams was a number one best-seller on the Los Angeles Times best seller list and was featured on Oprah's book club. Sweeter the Juice was a "notable book of the year", a best seller and garnered the Gustavus Meyers prize for best book on tolerance and the book was awarded the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Bruno Brand Award as best book on tolerance in 1995. In recognition of the importance of the book, The University of New Haven honored Haizlip an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters. The book is regularly taught in high schools across the country, and is required reading in numerous college courses[1] including sociology, psychology, women's studies, American studies, black studies and family studies.
[edit] References
Cal. Law Review, vol 89#5, Oct. 2001; Soc. of Professional Journalists, 2/7/07; Social Science Res. vol. 26#3,Sept, 97; Time, 11/23/98;Chicago Trib 2/26/95, 12/2/98; New York Times, 2/16/94;6/29/94;1/11/99; 9/10/99; 6/3/06;12/6/98/12/4/94 NY Daily News, 1/27/94; Boston Globe 2/22/94; Houston Chronicle 11/29/95; Schlesinger Library Newsletter, Fall 1995, Yale News, 11/18/94; Dallas Morning News 10/20/98; Washington Post, 2//7/94, 4/12/99;Denver Post 1/16/95;American Heritage, Mar.95; American Legacy summer 1996.