Robie Harris (néeHeilbrun; April 3, 1940 – January 6, 2024) was an American author. She wrote more than 30 children's books, including the frequently challenged It's Perfectly Normal (1994) and It's so Amazing (1999).[1][2]
Early life and education
Robie Heilbrun was born in Buffalo, New York on April 3, 1940.[3][4] Her mother worked in a biology laboratory, while her father was a radiologist.[5] She grew up attending a Reform synagogue in Buffalo.[6] She became interested in writing at a young age, and began writing stories in kindergarten.[7] In high school, she was an editor of her school's newspaper.[7] She graduated from Wheaton College, where she served as editor of the school's yearbook, with a bachelor's degree in English in 1962.[7][8] She went on to graduate from the Bank Street College of Education with a master's in teaching in 1966.[7][8]
Career
After earning her teaching degree in 1966, Harris became an English elementary school teacher at the Bank Street School for Children. While working with children at the school's after-school Head Start program, she headed a project allowing the students to film the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood through their eyes. With the help of filmmaker Philip Courter, the students' footage was compiled into a film, Child’s Eye View. In 1968, the film was screened at the Lincoln Center Film Festival.[7]
Harris collaborated with multiple writers through the Bank Street Writers’ Laboratory, of which she was a member.[7]
In 1977, Harris released her first book, Before You Were Three: How You Began to Walk, Talk, Explore, and Have Feelings, which she co-wrote with her friend and cousin Elizabeth Levy. The book was inspired by the birth of her first child, and her nieces' and nephews' reaction to him.[7]
Harris wrote several children's books about childbirth and human sexuality, including It's Perfectly Normal and It's so Amazing, two of the American Library Association's most-challenged books of the 21st century. Harris continued to update the two books, as well as the third in the trio, It's NOT the Stork!, up until her death.[7]