1
|
| Jeannette Walls | |
|---|---|
| Born | January 1 1960 Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.A. |
| Occupation | Novelist, columnist |
Jeannette Walls is a writer and journalist. She was born in Phoenix, Arizona. She graduated with honors from Barnard College, the women\'s college affiliated with Columbia University. She published a bestselling memoir, The Glass Castle[1], in 2005. The book is being made into a film by Paramount. Walls, Jeannette (2006). The Glass Castle. New York: Scribner. ISBN 074324754X. Walls now lives in northern Virginia. She is married to writer John Taylor. She has written for New York Magazine, Esquire, and USA Today, and appears regularly on The Today Show, CNN and PrimeTimeLive.
After nearly eight years of writing for the "Scoop" at MSNBC.com,"Jeannette Walls, author, The Glass Castle, gossip columnist, MSNBC.com", Gothamist, 2005-05-27. Retrieved on 2007-04-11. Jeannette Walls left msnbc.com. Her final Scoop column appeared on 2007-07-26. She will be turning her full-time attention to writing books.MSNBC (2007-07-26). Jeannette Walls leaving msnbc.com (html). MSNBC.COM. Retrieved on 2007-08-12.
As revealed in her memoir, The Glass Castle, Walls and her three siblings were raised by nomadic parents; her father, Rex Walls, was an alcoholic and her mother was a schoolteacher-turned-painter. Driven by stubborn nonconformity, her parents roamed America, moving (or "doing the skedaddle", as her father put it) whenever money or food ran out. The family eventually settled in Welch, West Virginia, a small mining town. However, her father’s drinking and her mother’s depression grew worse, and the children became subject to the merciless taunting of the locals. According to Walls, she hid in the bathroom during school lunch breaks so nobody would notice she didn\'t have any lunch to eat. She would later rummage through the bins and eat whatever the other children had thrown away. Eventually her oldest sibling, Lori, moved herself to New York City. And following in her footsteps were her brother Brian, and her younger sister Maureen. In New York, she kept various journalism jobs, and eventually graduated from Barnard.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia