Photo courtesy of Joan Holub.
Joan Holub
, b. 1956
Joan Holub is a prolific children's author from the USA. Graduated from college in Texas with a fine arts degree. Worked as an art director at Scholastic trade books in New York. She has written and/or illustrated over 150 children's books. She has developed a range of series for teenagers on mythological themes: Goddess Girls, set in Mount Olympus Academy, Grimmtastic Tales series, set in Grimm Academy, Thunder Girls, about Norse gods set in Asgard Academy, and Heroes in Training, in which the male Greek gods, as very young men, set out on a range of adventures. For pre-school children, Jan Holub has written on a range of topics including several works with religious and historical themes. These include: This Little President; This Little Trailblazer, Hooray for St. Patrick’s Day!, and Light the Candles: A Hanukkah Lift-the-Flap Book. Joan Holub trained in fine art and worked as an art director at a graphic design company before becoming a children's illustrator and then author.
Sources:
Official website (accessed: July 2, 2018).
Profile at the penguinrandomhouse.com (accessed: July 2, 2018).
Profile at the simonandschuster.com (accessed: July 2, 2018).
Bio prepared by Sonya Nevin, University of Roehampton, sonya.nevin@roehampton.ac.uk and Allison Rosenblum, Bar-Ilan University, allie.rose89@gmail.com and Ayelet Peer, Bar-Ilan University, ayelet.peer@gmail.com
Questionnaire
1. What drew you to writing / working with Classical Antiquity and what challenges did you face in selecting, representing, or adapting particular myths or stories?
I learned to love Greek and Norse mythology in elementary school. I’m very comfortable adapting the framework of an existing myth or fairy tale by pushing it into a different setting, adding humor, and/or building in a nonfiction component. Staying true to the essential core of each myth along the way is important to me. A young Goddess Girls reader once told me she enjoyed the series because she “learned something”. In other words, while she liked being entertained, she appreciated that her familiarity and factual understanding of the original myths was broadened at the same time.
2. Why do you think classical / ancient myths, history, and literature continue to resonate with young audiences?
Kids have questions about their world. So it’s interesting to them to learn how ancient Greeks and other cultures answered questions about how their world worked in exciting tales of heroes and beasts. How did the sun cross the sky? In a chariot drawn by the god Helios. What caused night? The goddess Nyx’s starry cape covered the sky. Thrilling stories of courage and danger, such as Heracles’ twelve labors, the Trojan Horse, and the Argonauts never go out of style.
3. Do you have a background in classical education (Latin or Greek at school or classes at the University?) What sources are you using? Scholarly work? Wikipedia? Are there any books that made an impact on you in this respect?
I have an entire shelf of mythology resource books. Some of my favorite go-to sources are the Scholastic Mythlopedia series, Edith Hamilton’s Mythology, Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes, and www.theoi.com (accessed: May 28, 2018).
4. How concerned were you with "accuracy" or "fidelity" to the original? (another way of saying that might be – that I think writers are often more "faithful" to originals in adapting its spirit rather than being tied down at the level of detail – is this something you thought about?)
Each book in the Goddess Girls series (ages 8–12, Simon and Schuster) and Heroes in Training series (ages 7–10, Simon and Schuster) is a retelling of one or two Greek myths, with a twist. We stay as true as possible to the core bones of an original myth in order to give young readers a good understanding, but we include kid situations and humor to entertain. As an example, in Goddess Girls #1: Athena the Brain, Athena is summoned to attend Mount Olympus Academy, where Zeus is the principal. MOA teachers include Mr. Cyclops, who teaches Hero-ology, a class where students are graded on their abilities to maneuver small hero figures such as Odysseus, around a gameboard to enact the Trojan War, etc. Meanwhile, Athena, who is the goddess of invention among other things, inadvertently turns mean-girl Medusa’s hair to snakes and gives her the power to turn mortals to stone by means of a shampoo-like invention called Snakeypoo at the MOA invention fair.
5. Are you planning any further forays into classical material?
Suzanne Williams and I have written a new middle grade series called Thunder Girls (accessed: May 28, 2018), which is a twist on Norse mythology featuring strong girl characters. The first book Freya and the Magic Jewel releases May 2018 for ages 8–12, published by Simon and Schuster.
Prepared by Allison Rosenblum, Bar-Ilan University, allie.rose89@gmail.com and Ayelet Peer, Bar-Ilan University, ayelet.peer@gmail.com
Records in database:
- Amphitrite the Bubbly (Goddess Girls, 17)
- Aphrodite & the Gold Apple (Little Goddess Girls, 3)
- Aphrodite & the Magical Box (Little Goddess Girls, 7)
- Aphrodite the Beauty (Goddess Girls, 3)
- Aphrodite the Diva (Goddess Girls, 6)
- Aphrodite the Fair (Goddess Girls, 15)
- Apollo and the Battle of the Birds (Heroes in Training, 6)
- Ares and the Spear of Fear (Heroes in Training, 7)
- Artemis & the Awesome Animals (Little Goddess Girls, 4)
- Artemis the Brave (Goddess Girls, 4)
- Artemis the Loyal (Goddess Girls, 7)
- Athena & the Island Enchantress (Little Goddess Girls, 5)
- Athena & the Magic Land (Little Goddess Girls, 1)
- Athena the Brain (Goddess Girls, 1)
- Athena the Proud (Goddess Girls, 13)
- Athena the Wise (Goddess Girls, 5)
- Be Careful, Icarus!
- Be Patient, Pandora! (Mini Myths)
- Brush Your Hair, Medusa!
- Calliope the Muse (Goddess Girls, 20)
- Cassandra the Lucky (Goddess Girls, 12)
- Clotho the Fate (Goddess Girls, 25)
- Crius and the Night of Fright (Heroes in Training, 9)
- Cronus and the Threads of Dread (Heroes in Training, 8)
- Do Not Open! The Story of Pandora’s Box
- Don't Get Lost, Odysseus!
- Echo the Copycat (Goddess Girls, 19)
- Eos the Lighthearted (Goddess Girls, 24)
- Good Job, Athena!
- Hades and the Helm of Darkness (Heroes in Training, 3)
- Hephaestus and the Island of Terror (Heroes in Training, 10)
- Hermes and the Horse with Wings (Heroes in Training, 13)
- Hestia the Invisible (Goddess Girls, 18)
- Hyperion and the Great Balls of Fire (Heroes in Training, 4)
- Iris the Colorful (Goddess Girls, 14)
- Make a Wish, Midas!
- Medea the Enchantress (Goddess Girls, 23)
- Medusa the Mean (Goddess Girls, 8)
- Medusa the Rich (Goddess Girls, 16)
- Nyx the Mysterious (Goddess Girls, 22)
- Pallas the Pal (Goddess Girls, 21)
- Pandora the Curious (Goddess Girls, 9)
- Persephone & the Evil King (Little Goddess Girls, 6)
- Persephone & the Giant Flowers (Little Goddess Girls, 2)
- Persephone the Daring (Goddess Girls, 11)
- Persephone the Grateful (Goddess Girls, 26)
- Persephone the Phony (Goddess Girls, 2)
- Perseus and the Monstrous Medusa (Heroes in Training, 12)
- Pheme the Gossip (Goddess Girls, 10)
- Play Nice, Hercules!
- Please Share, Aphrodite!
- Poseidon and the Sea of Fury (Heroes in Training, 2)
- Surprise, Trojans!: The Story of the Trojan Horse
- The Girls Games (Goddess Girls, Super Special)
- Typhon and the Winds of Destruction (Heroes in Training, 5)
- Uranus and the Bubbles of Trouble (Heroes in Training, 11)
- Zeus and the Thunderbolt of Doom (Heroes in Training, 1)