Mr. Sachar received a B.A. in economics from the University of California at Berkeley.His first book, Sideways Stories from Wayside School, was accepted for publication during his first year of law school.After receiving his law degree, he spent six years asking himself whether he wanted to be an author or a lawyer before deciding to write for children full-time.His books include Wayside School Gets a Little Stranger, There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom, Wayside School is Falling Down, Dogs Don't Tell Jokes, and the Marvin Redpost series.
Louis Sachar lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife and their daughter, Sherre. In His Oen Words...
"One thing I would like to know from my favorite authors is who their favorite authors are. So I will begin there. My favorite authors (not necessarily in order) are: E. L. Doctorow; J. D. Salinger; Kurt Vonnegut; Dostoyevski; Tolstoy; Flannery O'Connor; Kinky Friedman; Rex Stout; E. B. White; William Saroyan; John Steinbeck; Dr. Seuss. These are mostly adult authors, which is only fitting, since I am mostly an adult.
"I was horn in East Meadow, New York. My father worked on the seventy-eighth floor of the Empire State Building, which I thought was pretty cool. We moved to Tustin, California, when I was nine, not too far from Disneyland.
"I wrote my first children's story as part of a creative writing assignment in high school. That story was called "Apple Power" and was about a mean teacher named Mrs. Gorf who turned her students into apples. My teacher didn't think that I had taken the assignment seriously and suggested I write something else.
"During my last year of college at the University of California at Berkeley, I worked part-time at a nearby elementary school--Hillside School. I got college credit for being a teacher's aide, and I was paid two dollars an hour to watch over the kids on the playground. My official title was Noontime Supervisor, but the kids called me Louis the yard teacher.
"After graduating from college I wrote Sideways Stories from Wayside School. The kids in the book are named after the kids I knew at Hillside, and, of course, Louis the yard teacher is in there, too.
"I went to law school in San Francisco a year later, and the book was published during my second year. When I graduated in 1980, I had to make the difficult choice between writing and practicing law. I knew I could make a good living practicing law, but I chose to write because it was what I liked to do.
"I met Carla in 1981 while visiting a school in Texas. She was the school counselor and became the inspiration behind the character (also a counselor named Carla) in There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom. When I wrote the book, I didn't know I'd end up marrying her.
"We were married in 1985, and our daughter, Sherre, was horn in 1987. In 1990 we moved from San Francisco to Austin, Texas. We have a dog named Lucky. In my spare time I like to play duplicate bridge." --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fun story about pre-adolescent angst,
By P.W. Reader (Mountain View, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Johnny's in the Basement (Paperback)
Louis Sachar demonstrates genius in this book by drawing a very fine and distinct line between childhood and adulthood from the parents' point of view. From protagonist Johnny's point of view, it is not as clear-cut.Johnny wants nothing more than to be grown-up the way all kids do. But reality isn't quite as pretty. Sure, they give him a later bedtime, but when you have to spend that extra time before bed washing dishes and doing chores, it's not quite the same. Nor are his "adult" birthday gifts (aka boring stuff that he'd never use, except for dance lessons he cannot avoid). On top of that, the silly parents make him get rid of his life collection of bottle caps. In addition, he begins to discover his new feelings for girls when he meets young Valerie...a girl smarter than all the rest of her family put together, who likes Johnny for a very special and unique reason. And knows how to say JUST the right things to make him feel good. Johnny's conversations with the moon also add an interesting twist. The little sister Christine fits in just dandy in the story, making all of Johnny's little annoyances that much worse. The one gripe I have about this book is the author's casual treatment of the kids smoking cigarettes. When Johnny discovers them and gets to the point where he can smoke without coughing up a storm, it's just too easy for him to quit and condemn it without a real reason. He describes his smoking as "to feel nothing, to not have the pain" without getting into the seriousness of how addictive it can be.
9 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A GREAT AUTHOR, THE BOOK IS GOOD TOO,
By A Customer
This review is from: Johnny's in the Basement (Paperback)
Louis Sachar is a great author, and "Jonny in the basement" is good too. Not his best, but it is excellent. I'd have to congratulate Louis for all his success. Congratulations! And to anyone who wants to read this, do, it's a good book.
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