Courtesy of the Author from her personal website.
Suzanne Williams
, b. 1953
Suzanne Williams is an American prolific children's author and former elementary school librarian. She has written over 60 books for children.
She grew up in Oregon and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in sociology and a master’s in library science from the University of Oregon. She currently lives in Reno, Washington.
Source:
Official website (accessed: May 29, 2018).
Bio prepared by 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?
Writing about Greek mythology was my co-author, Joan Holub’s idea. She's loved mythology since childhood. Her enthusiasm for the subject got me excited about it too. Goddess Girls (ages 8–12) was our very first collaboration. Soon there will be 26 books in that series. One of the challenges we’ve faced in writing our (soon to be four) myth-based series for young readers is how to handle the sexual and violent content of many of the myths.
To downplay the violence, we often make it cartoonish and lighten it with humor. Since most of our gods and goddesses are pre-teens (as are our readers!), we deal with inappropriate sexual content by making changes that still allow us to keep to the spirit of the myth. For example: in introducing the Adonis myth, in which Aphrodite and Persephone fight over a beautiful youth they both desire, we decided to make Adonis a kitten, rather than a young man.
Another challenge has involved familial relationships among the various gods and goddesses. In Goddess Girls, Zeus is an adult, the principal of Mount Olympus Academy, the school attended by our “goddessgirls” and “godboys”. In mythology he would likely have fathered a good portion of the student body! So we made a decision that only Athena would call him “Dad”. (Until Hebe popped forth from a lettuce in Book 21, that is.) We do acknowledge many other family relationships. For example: Apollo and Artemis as brother and sister. Medusa and her sisters Euryale and Stheno. Persephone and her mother, Demeter.
2. Why do you think classical / ancient myths, history, and literature continue to resonate with young audiences?
Myths have got all the elements that draw us to stories: action, conflict, drama, humor, etc. What’s not to like?
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?
Neither Joan nor I have a classical education. I did take an online Greek and Roman mythology class a few years ago, however. (Taught by Peter Struck, University of Pennsylvania.) Terrific class!
For our Greek mythology-based series, Edith Hamilton’s Mythology is the reference we rely on the most. My co-author and I do consult Wikipedia and other online resources, especially for lists of monsters and maps and general information about ancient Greece. References for Thunder Girls, our soon-to-be-published Norse mythology-based series include: The Norse Myths by Kevin Crossley-Holland, D’Aulaires’ Book of Norse Myths, Norse Mythology: A Guide to the Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs by John Lindow, The Poetic Edda (translated and edited by Jackson Crawford), and The Prose Edda by Snorri Sturluson (Penguin Classics).
4. Are you planning any further forays into classical material?
In addition to Goddess Girls, my co-author and I have also collaborated on a second Greek mythology-based series called Heroes in Training (ages 6–9). It’s a humorous quest/adventure series with Zeus, Poseidon, Hades and other Olympians as ten-year-olds on the run from King Cronus and the Titans. Freya and the Magic Jewel, the first book in Thunder Girls, our Norse mythology-based series, publishes May 1, 2018. I travel to Norway frequently to visit my daughter, granddaughter, and Norwegian son-in-law, so I am very excited to be doing a Norse-myth series. Aladdin (Simon & Schuster) publishes all three of Joan’s and my mythology-based series. We will be doing a fourth myth-based series with them soon – for ages 5–8. Tentative title is Little Goddess Girls, and it will be another Greek myth-based series.
Prepared by 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)
- 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)
- Echo the Copycat (Goddess Girls, 19)
- Eos the Lighthearted (Goddess Girls, 24)
- 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)
- 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)
- Poseidon and the Sea of Fury (Heroes in Training, 2)
- 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)