Mary Hays Weik

Mary Hays Weik (1898–1979) was an American children's book author and activist for world government.[1][2]

Weik was born on December 18, 1898 in Greencastle, Indiana, daughter of the biographer Jesse W. Weik.[3] She was the author of The Jazz Man, which received a Newbery Honor in 1967.[4] Her daughter was the author and illustrator Ann Grifalconi.[5]

She wrote booklets for the American Federation of World Citizens and the Committee to End Radiological Hazards.[6]

Weik died on December 25, 1979 in Manhattan, New York.[1] Her papers are held at the University of Michigan.[3]

Works

  • Adventure: A Book of Verse, 1919
  • The House at Cherry Hill, 1938
  • A World Set Free, 1954
  • Shadow over America, 1962
  • The Jazz Man, 1966
  • The Scarlet Thread: A Group of One Act Plays for Young People, 1968
  • A House on Liberty Street, 1973
gollark: Randomly cease to exist and appear 1021486124 nanoseconds later.
gollark: See, physics forbids anyone from knowing if I am quantum or not.
gollark: The apiaristic uncertainty principle forbids this.
gollark: Ah, yet another apiocryptofinancioform.
gollark: I assume you can temporarily boot into a live USB or even just use iwd's built-in DHCP feature.

References

  1. Weik, Mary Hays, 1898-
  2. Mary Hays Weik: biography
  3. Mary Hays Weik papers, 1921-1979
  4. Association for Library Service to Children (2009). The Newbery & Caldecott Awards: A Guide to the Medal and Honor Books. American Library Association. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-8389-3585-9.
  5. Bernice E. Cullinan; Diane Goetz Person (2005). The Continuum Encyclopedia of Children's Literature. A&C Black. p. 335. ISBN 978-0-8264-1778-7.
  6. Mary Hays Weik at WorldCat
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