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Who
Wrote That? Jeri Chase Ferris remembers being twelve years old and riding her black Arabian mare through the golden wheat fields of Nebraska under steel gray thunderheads. “That combination…is seared in my memory,” she says. Perhaps it was the dramatic contrast of colors. Perhaps it was Ferris’s first attempt as a future writer to record an event of visceral importance. In hindsight, she reflects that her own age during her most vivid memory is the same age as most of her readers today. Ferris says, “I didn’t want to be a writer. I read all the time, but I never thought that someone had to write those books.” Teaching inner-city students inspired Ferris to write for children. “I taught in Los Angeles for 30 years,” she says. “I wanted books for my students with good role models. I couldn’t find many books about people of color who made a difference so I decided to write them myself.” Ferris enrolled in a children’s writing class at UCLA in the late 1980s taught by Caroline Arnold, a prolific nonfiction author with more than 140 books to her credit. Ferris’s Go Free or Die began as a project for this class. “I was teaching third grade at the time,” she says, “and [Harriet Tubman] popped into my mind as a dramatic character to write about, running away escaping the slave catchers.” After two rejections, Ferris submitted her manuscript to Lerner Publishing and found herself in the right place at the right time. “Lerner was becoming aware that there should be biographies of people of color,” Ferris says, “and I suggested several.” Ferris not only sold Go Free or Die, but signed a contract for three additional books. Ferris
is a three-time winner of the Carter G. Woodson Award for the most distinguished
books for young readers depicting ethnic diversity in the United States.
Her biographies delve into the lives of eleven multi-cultural figures,
including Sojourner Truth, Biddy Mason, Mary Ann Shadd Cary, Marian Anderson
and Matthew Henson. Sometimes a line in a newspaper or magazine article
will lead Ferris on a quest for information about an unfamiliar person.
The acid test of a viable biography for Ferris is her subject’s
courage. The courage of her characters inspires Ferris, which in turn
inspires her readers. One letter from a young fan says, “You made
me see I can be anything I want to be.” According to Ferris, the
idea stage is the most difficult. “Lots and lots of times, it’s
a dead-end or the person has been done to death so there’s no point
in [writing about] him again, but then I find just the right person and
our souls meet somewhere and I’m drawn to that person’s life
and the hardships that person had to overcome.” In the
meantime, Ferris plans to jump into fiction with a middle grade novel
about the siege of Leningrad. Although she does not yet have a contract,
the topic is close to her heart. Ferris’s husband, Tom, used to
teach Russian studies at Beverly Hills High School. In 1970, they took
a class on a field trip to the Soviet Union and the Ferrises developed
a passion for the Russian people who endured the Soviet era. “The
history, culture, people, architecture, art, music, language, tragedy
and turmoil was like a magnet that sucked us into the heart of Russia,”
she says. Together they traveled to what used to be the USSR over 30 times
and amassed a collection of over 8,000 Soviet artifacts currently housed
at the University of Southern California and described as “exceptional
and unconventional” and a “precious and unprecedented research
tool.” “I
do my best to write in the late afternoon and evening,” she says,
using that “aloneness” to enter her character’s world
and become that person for a few hours at a time. “I have to be
that person or it’s just not working.”
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