Richard Kennedy (author)

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Jerome Richard Kennedy (born December 23, 1932, in Jefferson City, Missouri), is an American writer of children's books and a supporter of the Oxfordian theory of Shakespeare authorship. He was the first to suggest that John Ford was the author of the 578-line poem A Funeral Elegy which in 1995 had been touted by Donald Foster as being written by William Shakespeare.[1]

Life

He was educated at Portland State University (B.A., liberal arts, 1958) and earned a teaching certificate in elementary education from the University of Oregon.[2] Teaching elementary school proved unsatisfactory, so he tried other jobs, including bookstore owner, deep sea fisherman, moss picker, custodian, cabdriver, and archivist, before turning to writing.[3][4]

Shakespeare authorship question

Kennedy has been a long-time advocate of the theory that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, was the person actually responsible for writing the works of William Shakespeare. He is a founding member of the Shakespeare Fellowship, and in 2005 he proposed that Shakespeare's Stratford monument was originally built to honor John Shakespeare, William's father, who by tradition was a "considerable dealer in wool".[5]

Works

  • The Parrot and the Thief, illustrated by Marcia Sewall, 1974
  • The Contests at Cowlick, illus. Marc Simont, 1976
  • The Porcelain Man, illus. Sewall, 1976
  • Come Again in the Spring, illus. Sewall, 1976
  • The Blue Stone, illus. Ronald Himler, 1976
  • Oliver Hyde's Dishcloth Concert, illus. Robert A. Parker, 1977
  • The Dark Princess, illus. Donna Diamond, 1978
  • The Rise and Fall of Ben Gizzard, illus. Sewall, 1978
  • The Mouse God, illus. Stephen Harvard, 1979
  • Delta Baby and Two Sea Songs, illus. Lydia Dabcovich, Charles Mikolaycak, and Jim Arnosky, 1979 – poetry
  • The Lost Kingdom of Karnica, illus. Uri Shulevitz, 1979
  • The Leprechaun's Story, illus. Sewall, 1979
  • Inside My Feet: The Story of a Giant, illus. Himler, 1979
  • Crazy in Love, illus. Sewall, 1980
  • The Song of the Horse, illus. Sewall, 1981
  • The Boxcar at the Center of the Universe, illus. Jeff Kronen, 1982
  • Amy's Eyes, illus. Richard Egielski, 1985
  • Richard Kennedy: Collected Stories, illus. Sewall, 1987
  • Little Love Song, illus. Petra Mathers, 1992 – poetry

Musicals by Kennedy and Mark Lambert:

  • Camelot, God Wot! or What a Woman Wants, 1989
  • Hans Christian Andersen's The Snow Queen: A Christmas Pageant, adapted by Kennedy, music by Mark Lambert, illus. Edward S. Gazsi (Laura Geringer Books, 1996), LCCN 95-52211

Awards

  • American Library Association Notable Book List, 1976, for The Blue Stone
  • American Library Association Notable Book List, 1978, for The Dark Princess
  • Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award, 1976, for The Blue Stone and The Porcelain Man
  • Association of Logos Bookstores Award, 1985, for Amy's Eyes
  • German Rattenfänger (Rat Catcher, i.e. Pied Piper) award as best foreign book translated in 1988 for Amy's Eyes

References

  1. Niederkorn, William S. (June 20, 2002). "A Scholar Recants on His 'Shakespeare' Discovery". The New York Times.
  2. Harrison, John (March 12, 1977). "It's a gift". Eugene Register-Guard: pp. 5A, 7A.
  3. Harrison.
  4. "(Jerome) Richard Kennedy." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2001. Literature Resource Center. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
  5. Vickers, Brian (June 30, 2006). "Stratford's Wool Pack Man". Times Literary Supplement (5387): p. 17.

External links