Sally Watson (January 28, 1924) is an American author best known for her English Family Tree series, which encompasses generations of a family with roots in England and Scotland.
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Sally Watson was born in Seattle, Washington and is an alumna of Reed College. She began writing fiction in 1953; while doing so she worked for Great Books and co-wrote the audio-visual reading course, Listen and Learn with Phonics. In 1964 she moved to England, where she lived for 24 years, writing meticulously researched juvenile historical fiction featuring feisty and adventurous heroines, such as Jade,[1] which were published by Henry Holt and Company. Her other activities included Scottish highland dance, teaching Judo, in which she earned a black belt, and Mensa International. The publishing climate for juvenile fiction eventually changed, and by the mid-1970s her books had gone out of print.
Sally eventually returned to the United States, taking up residence in Santa Rosa, California, where she became active in feral cat rescue organizations. All the while her fans were pleading for her books to be republished; eventually Image Cascade reprinted many of the novels. Sally continues to add to her English family tree series and has also published several young adult novels set in Ancient Egypt. Her most recent books are The Angry Earth, a story of the New Madrid earthquakes of 1811, and Tailwavers, a story for all catlovers, told in part through a series of letters.
Further information about Sally can be found in Something About the Author.[2]
The historical novels Sally Watson has laid in Great Britain and America are separate and complete, yet are united by a family tree. They romp across four centuries, from 1582 London to 1892 Northern California. No one gets a starring role twice, but main characters sometimes reappear in another book in a relatively minor role as grandparent, sibling, cousin, lover or even a wayward eyebrow. The predominant family trait seems to be producing and marrying strong-willed women. Though the protagonists range in age from eleven to adult, and some are specifically juvenile and others definitely adult, the characterization, vocabulary, and plotting are appropriate to all ages from—say—eleven up.
To Build a Land won the Woodward Annual Award in 1959.
Witch of the Glens was on the Horn Book Magazine honor list in 1963.
The Mukhtar's Children was named as a Horn Book Magazine Fanfare Best Book of the Year in 1969.
Magic at Wychwood was recommended by Library Journal in 1970.
Linnet was a Junior Literary Guild selection in 1971.