- Source: William Bell (author)
William Edwin Bell (27 October 1945 – 30 July 2016) was a Canadian author of young adult fiction, born in Toronto, Ontario. He lived in Orillia, Ontario.
Personal life and education
Bell was born in Toronto on 27 October 1945 to William B. and Irene (nee Spowart) Bell. He attended New Toronto Secondary School, which inspired his novel Crabbe. In 1969, he received a Master of Arts in literature from the University of Toronto, and in 1984, he received a Master of Education in education curriculum and administration from the university's Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.
He married Susan Arnup and had three children: Dylan, Megan and Brendan. Before his death, he lived with his wife, Chinese-Canadian author Ting-Xing Ye. He died in Orillia on 30 July 2016 at the age of 70.
Career
= Teaching
=Bell taught in a variety of settings. He was a high school teacher at several schools in Simcoe County and the head of the English department at Orillia District Collegiate & Vocational Institute. In the early 1980s, he taught English in China at the Harbin University of Science and Technology and the Foreign Affairs College. He also worked at the University of British Columbia and the Simcoe County Board of Education. He was frequently invited to give presentations at conferences and to speak to elementary and secondary school students on creative writing.
= Writing
=The inspiration to become a writer came to Bell when he heard a speech by John Metcalf, author of one of his favourite short stories. Bell said he likes to write for young people because they are "the best audience: they are loyal to the writers they like and they are enthusiastic readers".
Bell wrote many books, including three set near his home in Orillia, Ontario (Five Days of the Ghost, Stones and Fanatics), two in Barrie (Death Wind, The Cripples' Club), one in Toronto (Julian) and one in Fergus (Zack).
Bell's work has been widely published outside of Canada. His books have been translated into Chinese, French, German, Spanish, Polish, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch and Japanese.
Awards and honors
Books
Crabbe - 1986
Metal Head - 1987
The Cripples' Club - 1988 (reissued in 1993 as Absolutely Invincible)
Death Wind - 1989
Five Days of the Ghost - 1989
Forbidden City - 1990
No Signature - 1992
Speak to the Earth - 1994
The Golden Disk - 1995 (a picture book)
River My Friend - 1996 (a picture book)
Zack - 1998
Stones - 2001
Alma - 2003
Throwaway Daughter – 2003 (written with his wife Ting-Xing Ye)
Just Some Stuff I Wrote - 2005
The Blue Helmet - 2006
Only in the Movies - 2010
Fanatics - 2011
Julian - 2014
References
External links
Official website (Ting-xing Ye and Bell)
Orillia Hall of Fame
William Bell at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
William Bell at Library of Congress, with 10 library catalogue records
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bell hooks
- Muhammad
- Indonesia
- Stay Alive
- Amerika Serikat
- Australia
- Dating Queen
- Manchester City F.C.
- Glenn Curtiss
- KFC
- William Bell (author)
- William Bell
- William Bell Scott
- William Bell (singer)
- Bell Witch
- Rob Bell
- Art Bell
- William Harrison Bell
- The Bell Curve
- Bell Labs