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Author
Spotlight
Tracy Barrett
Meigs Magnet School
(2011)
[Tracy Barrett Book List]


. . . . .
. . . Dr. Tracy Barrett
. . The Anna of Byzantium author visited Meigs Magnet School on April 26, 2007.
The Anna of Byzantium author visited Meigs Magnet School on April 16, 2009.

Tracy Barrett is the author of numerous books and magazine articles for young readers. She holds a Bachelor's Degree with honors in Classics-Archaeology from Brown University and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Medieval Italian Literature from the University of California, Berkeley. Her scholarly interests in the ancient and medieval worlds overlap in her fiction and nonfiction works.

A grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to study medieval women writers led to the writing of her award-winning young-adult novel, Anna of Byzantium. Her most recent publications are a middle-grade novel, On Etruscan Time (Henry Holt Books for Young Readers, a sequel to Cold in Summer), and a nonfiction history for middle- schoolers, The Ancient Chinese World (Oxford University Press, with Terry Kleeman). She is currently writing a middle-grade novel with the working title The Other Side of the Story and a middle-grade medieval mystery series.

Tracy has taught courses on writing for children and on children's literature at various institutions and frequently makes presentations to groups of students, librarians, teachers, and others.

She teaches Italian, Women's Studies, and Humanities at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.


(excerpt from tracybarrett.com)

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[LINK] to a vanderbilt university article
. . . . . http://www.vanderbilt.edu/register/articles?id=23798


. . . . .
. Dr.
Tracy
Barrett

(in her own words)
. Dr. Tracy Barrett: (on writing)(from TracyBarrett.com)
I grew up in a town where many authors live, and thought of writers as just ordinary neighbors. The wonderful Jean Fritz was one of these authors. She gave me an original illustration from her book that is still my favorite, The Cabin Faced West (the drawing is now hanging on the wall above my computer). And since I liked writing I thought it might be a good job to have someday.
But when I grew older I got discouraged about writing, because every time I read a wonderful book I would think, “Oh, I could never write that. Why even try?” And I was right. I could never write Charlotte’s Web or Mrs. Mike (two of my favorite books). It took until I was grown up to realize that this was okay—I didn’t need to write those books. Someone else had already done it! But there were other books that no one but I could write. So I started writing again. My first book wasn’t published until I was almost forty, and I regret that I wasted all that time being discouraged.


Dr. Tracy Barrett: (FAQ)(from TracyBarrett.com)
Where do you get your ideas?
I learned about Princess Anna Comnena while doing research on medieval women writers. I wondered how she became the kind of person she was, and even when I finished my research, I couldn't get her out of my mind. So I wrote Anna of Byzantium to try to figure her out. I'll never know if I succeeded in uncovering why the real Anna Comnena turned out the way she did, but at least I was able to stop wondering about her!

The idea for Cold in Summer came to me slowly. We used to spend a lot of time on Center Hill Lake in Tennessee, which was formed when a dam was built, flooding a valley. It felt creepy to swim above what used to be a town, with houses and churches and stores. But that odd feeling wasn’t enough to make a story.

The author Sid Fleischman says that one idea is like a stick: you can’t do much with it. But two ideas are like two sticks: you can rub them together, and if you’re lucky, you’ll get a fire. My “second stick” for Cold in Summer was something that an old man who lived by the lake told my husband. He said that there was a crack in the side of the hill that blew out cold air in summer and warm air in winter. These two ideas came together to form the basis for Cold in Summer.

Will you write a sequel to Anna of Byzantium?
No, because I'm not curious about her any more!

I did, however, write a sequel to Cold in Summer. The main character (Ariadne's younger brother, Hector) gets involved in time travel to an ancient village in Italy where he has to right an old wrong without influencing the present. It's called On Etruscan Time and it came out in May, 2005.

How long does it take you to write a book?
I never know! I squeeze in writing between so many other things that I don't think I could ever count up the hours. I wrote one book in six weeks, but others have taken two or three years. I lead a busy life (I teach at a university and have a family and pets) so I fit my writing in where I can.

Which of your books is your favorite?
Whichever one I'm working on at the moment!

Are you working on anything now?
I usually have a lot of projects going! Right now I'm writing a sequel to Cold in Summer and On Etruscan Time (with the working title The Renaissance Man); a historical novel about a slave-girl set in the Viking era; and a four-book mystery series called The Sherlock Files, which will be published by Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. The first books in the series, The 100-Year-Old Mystery and The Beast of Blackslope, are due out in fall, 2007.

I've recently finished and am revising a mystery set in the Middle Ages, starring a kitchen-girl and a young lord as the detectives. I'm also revising a novel about a blended family in an undefined time in the past, roughly the sixteenth century, in an undefined part of Europe.
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. . . . .
. Dr.
Tracy
Barrett

(photos)
. Dr. Tracy Barrett: (PHOTOS)(from TracyBarrett.com)








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. . . . .
. .. . Anna of Byzantium
. . . (from TracyBarett.com)
With the intriguing medieval Byzantine Empire as its setting, Anna of Byzantium is a fictionalized re-telling of the life of the historical Princess Anna Comnena, groomed to inherit the throne of the most powerful empire in her part of the world. But when her brother is named heir, her future falls apart. What will Anna do? Will she allow everything she has worked for, and everything she is most suited for, to be snatched away from her? Or will she strike back?

"Set in an exotic time and place, [Anna of Byzantium] is a fascinating mix of history, mystery, and intrigue." — Horn Book

Anna of Byzantium's major awards include Booklist Editor's Choice; Blue Ribbon Book, Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books; Notable Social Studies Trade Book, National Council for the Social Studies; Top Ten Historical Fiction (Booklist); ALA Best Book for Young Adults; ALA Quick Pick; 2000 Books for the Teen Age; Arizona State University English Education Honor List; 2001-2002 Texas Lone Star Reading List; and Arrow Editor’s Pick 6/02. Listed in Kathleen Odean's Great Books for Girls (2002), Anna of Byzantium was a featured book in the Scholastic Book Club 11/00 and has been translated into French, Japanese, Dutch, and Italian.
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[LINK] to tracybarrett.com for editorial reviews
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. . . . .
. . Cold in Summer
. . (from TracyBarrett.com)
It's bad enough that twelve-year-old Ariadne had to leave her school, her friends, and everything she knows in Florida, to move to a poky little town in Tennessee. But why does the mysterious May Butler tell Ariadne that she has to help May go home? Isn't she already home? How can she be lost when she's right there? And how can Ariadne help her?

"A genuine ghost story without coincidental explanations that will draw readers eerily in."
— Kirkus

Cold in Summer has been named to the New York Public Library's "Books for the Teen Age;" "Best Fantasy Books of the Year" (VOYA); "The Best Children's Books of the Year," Nine to Twelve/ Fantasy category (Children's Book Committee at Bank Street College of Education); Mark Twain Award nominee (Missouri Association of School Librarians), South Carolina Book Award nominee.
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[LINK] to tracybarrett.com for editorial reviews
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. . . . .
. . . On Etruscan Time
. . . (from TracyBarett.com)
No one ever listens to Hector. He wanted to hang out with his friends this summer, but instead he's stuck in Italy at an archaeological dig with his mom. The ancient Etruscan artifacts are interesting, but no one has time for him.
    Then he makes a discovery of his own—a strange, unsettling stone that looks like an eye. The stone brings nightmares about Arath, an Etruscan boy who died thousands of years ago but now begs for Hector's help. Are these just dreams, or is Arath really in danger? As Hector unearths the truth, he realizes that he can make himself heard when it counts.

"fast-paced and suspenseful. . . . A good read."
— Kirkus

On Etruscan Time is on the William Allen White Award 2008 Master List and has been published in Italian by Mondadori.
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[LINK] to tracybarrett.com for editorial reviews
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. . . . .
. . . The Ancient Greek World
. . . (from TracyBarrett.com)
A wise leader, defying tradition, boldly declares that free men of all classes have the right to vote. Nine sisters possess the power to inspire poetry. An entire community dedicates its way of life to raising and preparing its citizens to be fierce warriors. Solon, the Muses, and the Spartans are just a few of the intriguing figures who make up The Ancient Greek World. Written with Jennifer Roberts.

"With the continuing discoveries of archaeologists and researchers, history is constantly changing . . . and so is learning about history thanks to this series."
— Growing Minds
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[LINK] to tracybarrett.com for editorial reviews
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. . . . .
. . . The Ancient Chinese World
. . . (from TracyBarrett.com)
The Ancient Chinese World uses primary sources to describe the history of ancient China and how it still influences the lives of billions of people today. From Peking Man to the "Golden Men" era of Buddhism, authors Terry Kleeman and Tracy Barrett trace the wonders of the Chinese past through its primary sources.

"[A] dramatic story of rulers, writers, soldiers and citizens who made up the world of ancient China."
— Paragon Book Gallery
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[LINK] to tracybarrett.com for editorial reviews
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. . . . .
. Dr.
Tracy
Barrett

(her own story)
. Dr. Tracy Barrett: (BIO)(from TracyBarrett.com)

BIOGRAPHY...

Tracy Barrett is the author of numerous books and magazine articles for young readers. She holds a Bachelor's Degree with honors in Classics-Archaeology from Brown University and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Medieval Italian Literature from the University of California, Berkeley. Her scholarly interests in the ancient and medieval worlds overlap in her fiction and nonfiction works.

A grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to study medieval women writers led to the writing of her award-winning young-adult novel, Anna of Byzantium. Her most recent publications are a middle-grade novel, On Etruscan Time (Henry Holt Books for Young Readers, a sequel to Cold in Summer), and a nonfiction history for middle- schoolers, The Ancient Chinese World (Oxford University Press, with Terry Kleeman). She is currently writing a middle-grade novel with the working title The Other Side of the Story and a middle-grade medieval mystery series.

Since 1999 Tracy Barrett has been Regional Advisor for the Midsouth (Tennessee and Kentucky) with the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators.

T
racy has taught courses on writing for children and on children's literature at various institutions and frequently makes presentations to groups of students, librarians, teachers, and others.

She teaches Italian, Women's Studies, and Humanities at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Click here for an article about her double life as professor and writer!


More from Dr. Barrett (in her own words)...

I often get letters asking for more information for school reports.
Here is the biographical information that is most often requested:

I was born in 1955 in Cleveland, Ohio, and grew up mostly in New York state. I went to college in New England and graduate school in California.

The first book I ever read by myself was called Little Bobo and His Blue Jacket. I still have it. I learned to read when I was three, but I know now that this doesn't mean much. My brother didn't really read until he was seven, and now he reads more and remembers it better than I do.

My favorite books when I was growing up were Charlotte's Web; The Phantom Tollbooth; The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe; The Return of the Twelves; The Jungle Book; The Princess and the Goblin; Five Children and It; Mrs. Mike; Pippi Longstocking; Hitty, Her First Hundred Years; The Secret Garden; the first half of The Once and Future King; Emily of New Moon, poems by William Blake, Ogden Nash, and especially Don Marquis.

As I grew older, my favorites included Kristin Lavransdatter, the second half of The Once and Future King, A Death in the Family, anything by Charles Dickens, especially Bleak House and A Tale of Two Cities, poems by John Donne, essays by E.B. White (the author of Charlotte's Web), and anything by Jane Austen, James Thurber, and George Eliot.

I have a husband, a 21-year-old daughter, an 18-year-old son, three Jack Russell terriers, and a cat.

I teach Italian and other subjects at Vanderbilt University and I like to travel, especially to Italy, and especially with my family. My other hobby is knitting (I made the sweater in the picture above). I used to skydive (that's how I met my husband—on the ground, not in the air!) but I haven't jumped out of an airplane in a long time.

If you have any questions that I haven't answered here or in the interview on the Writing page, you can write to me at tracytbarrett@yahoo.com or at P.O. Box 120061, Nashville, TN 37212 (please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope if you want a reply). I always answer my mail, but I won't do your homework, so please don't ask the theme of one of my books, or ask me to find similes and metaphors, or to tell you anything else that your teacher wants you to figure out on your own!
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LINKS for an AUTHOR STUDY!
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[LINK] Author Study...
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[LINK] Candid Photos from April 26... (soon)
[LINK] Synopsis for Anna of Byzantium...
[LINK] Synopsis for Cold in Summer...
[LINK] Synopsis for On Etruscan Time...
[LINK] Discussion Questions for Anna of Byzantium...
[LINK] Discussion Questions for Cold in Summer...
[LINK] Discussion Questions for On Etruscan Time...
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[LINK] Candid Photos from April 26... (soon)
[LINK] Curriculum Guide for Anna of Byzantium...
[LINK] Curriculum Guide for Cold in Summer...
[LINK] Curriculum Guide for On Etruscan Time...
[LINK] Criticial Reviews of Anna of Byzantium...
[LINK] Criticial Reviews of Cold in Summer...
[LINK] Criticial Reviews of On Etruscan Time...
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Pictures are worth 1,000 words...
Pictures from Dr. Barrett's visit!
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