Lois Lowry Popular Books

Lois Lowry Biography & Facts

Lois Ann Lowry (; née Hammersberg; born March 20, 1937) is an American writer. She is the author of several books for children and young adults, including The Giver Quartet, Number the Stars, and Rabble Starkey. She is known for writing about difficult subject matters, dystopias, and complex themes in works for young audiences. Lowry has won two Newbery Medals: for Number the Stars in 1990 and The Giver in 1994. Her book Gooney Bird Greene won the 2002 Rhode Island Children's Book Award. Many of her books have been challenged or even banned in some schools and libraries. The Giver, which is common in the curricula in some schools, has been prohibited in others. Life Lowry was born on March 20, 1937, in Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, to Katherine Gordon Landis and Robert E. Hammersberg.: xi  Her maternal grandfather, Merkel Landis, a banker, created the Christmas Club savings program in 1910.: 24  Initially, Lowry's parents named her "Cena" for her Norwegian grandmother, but upon hearing the news, her grandmother telegraphed and instructed Lowry's parents that the child should have an American name.: 12 Lowry was the middle child. She had an older sister named Helen, and a younger brother called Jon. Helen died of cancer in 1962, but Lowry and her brother still share a close relationship.Lowry's father was an army dentist, whose work moved the family all over the United States and to many parts of the world. Lowry and her family moved from Hawaii to Brooklyn, New York, in 1940, when Lowry was three years old. They relocated in 1942 to her mother's hometown in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, when Lowry's father was deployed to the Pacific during World War II. Lowry began reading at three years old, and after first grade, she skipped second at the Franklin School in Carlisle.After World War II ended, Lowry moved with her family to Tokyo, Japan, where her father was stationed from 1948 to 1952. Lowry attended seventh and eighth grades at the American School in Japan, a school for dependents of those involved in the military. She returned to the United States when the Korean War began in 1950. Lowry and her family lived in Carlisle again in 1950, where she attended her freshman year in high school before moving to Governors Island, New York, when her father was assigned to First Army Headquarters there. Lowry briefly attended Curtis High School, on Staten Island, then graduated from high school at Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn Heights, New York, attending from 1952 to 1954. She then attended Pembroke College, which became fully merged with Brown University in 1971.: xi  There she met her future husband, Donald Grey Lowry. Lowry left the university in 1956 after her marriage to Donald Grey Lowry, a U.S. Navy officer. The couple moved several times from San Diego to New London, Connecticut, to Key West, Florida, to Charleston, South Carolina, to Cambridge, Massachusetts and finally to Portland, Maine. They had two daughters, Alix and Kristin, and two sons, Grey and Benjamin., While raising her children, Lowry completed her degree in English literature at the University of Southern Maine in Portland, Maine, in 1972. After earning her bachelor of arts, she continued at the university to pursue graduate studies.In 1977, at 40 years old, Lowry's first book, A Summer to Die, was published. During that same year, Donald Lowry and she divorced. Two years later she met Martin Small in Boston and was in a relationship with him for over 30 years, until his death in 2011. From 2014 she has been in a relationship with Howard Corwin, a retired physician.Lowry's son Grey, a USAF major and flight instructor, was killed in the crash of his fighter plane in 1995. Lowry acknowledged that it was the most difficult day of her life, and she said, "His death in the cockpit of a warplane tore away a piece of my world, but it left me, too, with a wish to honor him by joining the many others trying to find a way to end conflict on this very fragile earth."As of 2023, Lowry divides her time between Maine and Naples, Florida, and she still remains an active writer and speaker. Writing career Lowry first began her career as a freelance journalist. In the 1970s, she submitted a short story to Redbook magazine, which was intended for adult audiences, but was written from a child's perspective. An editor working at Houghton Mifflin who read the Redbook story suggested to Lowry that she should write a children's book. Lowry agreed and wrote her first book A Summer to Die, which was later published by Houghton Mifflin in 1977 when she was 40 years old. The book featured the theme of terminal illness, which is based on Lowry's own experiences with her sister Helen.Lowry continued to write about difficult topics in her next publication, Autumn Street (1979), which explores themes of coping with racism, grief, and fear at a young age. The novel is told from the perspective of a young girl who is sent to live with her grandfather during World War II, which is also based on her own experiences of having her father deployed during World War II. Of all the books she has published, Autumn Street is considered to be her most autobiographical.In the same year of publishing Autumn Street, Lowry also published her novel Anastasia Krupnik, the first installment in the Anastasia series. The series, which touches on serious themes with a humorous approach, continued through to 1995. Lowry published Number the Stars in 1989, which received multiple awards, including the 1990 Newbery Medal. Lowry received another Newbery in 1994, for The Giver (1993). After publishing The Giver, she went on to publish another three companion novels that take place in the same universe: Gathering Blue (2000), Messenger (2004), and finally Son (2012), which tied all three of the previous books together. Collectively, they are referred to as The Giver Quartet. The New York Times described the quartet as "less a speculative fiction than a kind of guide for teaching children (and their parents, if they're listening carefully) how to be a good person."In early 2020, she released a book of poetry, called On the Horizon, charting her childhood memories of life in Hawaii and Tokyo, and the lives lost during the attack on Pearl Harbor and the bombing of Hiroshima.During the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, American publishing company Scholastic Corporation asked Lowry to write a new introduction to Like the Willow Tree, a story of a young girl living in Portland, Maine, who was orphaned during the 1918 Spanish flu epidemic. The book was first published in 2011, before being reissued by Scholastic in September 2020. Critical reception and banning Throughout her works, Lowry has explored several complex issues, including racism, terminal illness, murder, the Holocaust, and the questioning of authority, among other challenging topics. Her writing on such matters has accumulated both praise and criticism. The Chicago Tribune has said a theme runnin.... Discover the Lois Lowry popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Lois Lowry books.

Best Seller Lois Lowry Books of 2024

  • Savage City synopsis, comments

    Savage City

    Sophia McDougall

    An explosion rips through the Colosseum, and as the smoke clears the world is changed forever. A new Emperor, spurred on by a riddling prophecy and armed with a devastating superwe...

  • I Am Someone Else synopsis, comments

    I Am Someone Else

    Lee Bennett Hopkins & Chris Hsu

    Celebrated poet Lee Bennett Hopkins shares a diverse collection of poems that ask (with the help of Newbery medalist Lois Lowry, former US Children's Poet Laureate J. Patrick Lewis...

  • Scorched Earth synopsis, comments

    Scorched Earth

    Tommy Wallach

    From the New York Times bestselling author of We All Looked Up comes the exciting conclusion to the “haunting…beautiful and heartbreaking” (School Library Journal) Anchor & Sop...

  • Waiting for the Storks synopsis, comments

    Waiting for the Storks

    Katrina Nannestad

    The powerful new novel from master storyteller Katrina Nannestad.I don't want to remember the truck, or the night I was taken, or the family I left behind. I am not a sad Polish gi...

  • Rome Burning synopsis, comments

    Rome Burning

    Sophia McDougall

    In a parallel modern world, Rome and Japan stand on the brink of world war. When the Emperor falls ill, his young nephew Marcus Novius Caesar finds himself taking command of the gr...

  • Strange Fire synopsis, comments

    Strange Fire

    Tommy Wallach

    With the thrill of Westworld combined with the epic nature of Game of Thrones comes a gripping new trilogy about family, war, and the power of knowledge from the author of the New ...

  • Slow Burn synopsis, comments

    Slow Burn

    Tommy Wallach

    From the New York Times bestselling author of We All Looked Up comes the second novel in the Anchor & Sophia trilogy, where the rules of humanity are called into question by tw...

  • Scarecrows synopsis, comments

    Scarecrows

    Robert Westall

    There were three people, standing in the darkest place, watching him. Simon is outraged that his Mum plans to remarry. He can't bear her new fiancé or the way his mother and sister...

  • Us and Uncle Fraud synopsis, comments

    Us and Uncle Fraud

    Lois Lowry

    Mysterious things begin to happen after Uncle Claude comes to stay with his sister's family.

  • The Beasts In The Arena synopsis, comments

    The Beasts In The Arena

    Sophia McDougall

    A gripping short story, set in the world of Romanitas, plus an extended extract of Romanitas, chronicling the fortunes of the Roman Empire in a paralellel modern world . . . The Ro...

  • The Giver Summary synopsis, comments

    The Giver Summary

    The Summary Guy

    A Complete Summary of The Giver! The Giver is a novel written by awardwinning author Lois Lowry which was published in 1993. Before publishing The Giver, she won a Newbery Medal f...

  • The Good Book synopsis, comments

    The Good Book

    Andrew Blauner

    Thirtytwo prominent writers share the Bible passages most meaningful to them in this “Sunday School class you’ve been waiting for” (Garrison Keillor).The Good Book, with an introdu...

  • The Brown Reader synopsis, comments

    The Brown Reader

    Judy Sternlight

    “To be up all night in the darkness of your youth but to be ready for the day to come…that was what going to Brown felt like.” Jeffrey EugenidesIn celebration of Brown University’s...

  • The Giver synopsis, comments

    The Giver

    Instant-Summary

    The Giver A Comprehensive Summary The story starts in November with Jonas, who is eleven years old. Jonas lives in “the community” where cargo planes bring the supplies. One day,...

  • Romanitas synopsis, comments

    Romanitas

    Sophia McDougall

    In a parallel modern world, the Roman Empire stretches from India in the East to the Great Wall of Terranova in the West. A runaway slave girl with a strange gift sets out to rescu...

  • The Giver Summary synopsis, comments

    The Giver Summary

    Instant-Summary

    The Giver Giver Quartet Book A Comprehensive Summary The Giver is a novel written by awardwinning author Lois Lowry which was published in 1993. Before publishing The Giver, s...