

Myers was the recipient of numerous awards including two Newbery Honors, three National Book Award nominations, six Coretta Scott King Awards, the 2012 Library of Congress National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature Award, and the first Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement. Myers has three books which will be published posthumously. Myers’s young adult literature resonated with teenagers because they recognized themselves in his work.ĭuring his 45-year career, Walter Dean Myers wrote more than 100 books including Fallen Angels (1988) about the Vietnam War Monster (1998) about a 16-year-old boy wrongly charged with murder Sunrise over Fallujah (2008) dealing with the Iraq war and Lockdown (2011) in which a 14-year-old boy tries to escape the cycle of crime and violence. His compelling, heartfelt stories were often about troubled protagonists who struggled to make right choices and straighten out their lives. Visits with incarcerated youngsters gave Myers insight and material that black youth could identify with. Myers wrote about what he would have liked to have read as an adolescent in a language teens could relate to.


He discovered his voice and wrote realistically about urban life on the streets, in school and in the home, as well as crime and war in the 20th century. Walter Dean Myers understood what is was to be a black teenager struggling with identity issues in a white-dominated world. Winning a writing contest resulted in the publication of his first picture book, “Where Does the Day Go?” in 1969. His post-Army days found him without direction, facing family dysfunction and despair until he began concentrating on his writing. Myers dropped out of the elite Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan, New York and joined the Army on his 17th birthday due to a lack of discipline and the realization he could not afford college. Myers changed his name from Walter Milton Myers to Walter Dean Myers in honor of his foster parents. He was raised by his father’s first wife and her husband, Florence and Herbert Dean. His father, George Myers, sent him to Harlem, New York in 1939 following the death of his mother, Mary Myers.

Myers was born in Martinsburg, West Virginia on August 12, 1937, where he lived with his parents and four siblings until the age of eighteen months. The New York Times best-selling author is best known for authentically portraying African American youth facing tough life choices. He was a tireless advocate of literacy and education who also promoted diversity in children’s literature. Walter Dean Myers was a critically acclaimed African American children’s author of award-winning fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.
