| S. E. Hinton | |
|---|---|
| Born | Susan Eloise Hinton July 22, 1948 [1] Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States |
| Occupation | Novelist, screenwriter[2][3] |
| Nationality | American |
| Period | 1967– |
| Genres | Young Adult fiction, children's literature, fiction |
| Official website | |
Susan Eloise Hinton (born July 22[4], 1948[5][6]) is an American author most famous for her young adult novel The Outsiders.
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Susan Eloise Hinton was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA, on July 22, 1948. She first began writing in grade school, inspired by reading.[7]
S. E. Hinton is most widely known as the author of The Outsiders, her first and most popular novel, set in 1965, the year she began writing it.[8] The book was inspired by two rival gangs at her school, Will Rogers High School[9], the Greasers and the Socs.[10] It was published by Viking Press in 1967, during her freshman year at the University of Tulsa[11] and it became the second-best-selling young-adult novel in publishing history, with more than 14 million copies in print[12] and still sells more than 500,000 a year.[13]
Hinton's publisher suggested she use her initials instead of her first name so that male book reviewers would not dismiss the novel because its author was female.[14] She chose to continue using her initials, perhaps to better separate her public life from her private life.
Publicity and pressure led to three years of writer's block for the young author. Hinton's boyfriend was tired of her being depressed all the time, and suggested she write two pages a day. She did so, and completed That Was Then, This Is Now in 1970. She married her boyfriend a few months later. That Was Then, This Is Now was published in 1971.[15]
Hinton attended the University of Tulsa and earned her B.S. degree in 1970.[16][17] In 1989 she was the first recipient of the Margaret A. Edwards Award, presented by the Young Adult Library Services Association, a division of the ALA.[18] The award recognizes an author whose work depicts the experiences and emotions of teenagers and is widely accepted by young people. In 1997 Hinton received the Arrell Gibson Lifetime Achievement Award from the Oklahoma Center for the Book.[19]
After The Outsiders, her best-known book is Rumble Fish, which was originally published in 1968 as a short story in the University of Tulsa literary journal Nimrod and later expanded into a novel in 1975.[20] She also wrote Tex (1979) and Taming the Star Runner (1988).
In August 2009, Penguin Books released a special edition of Wuthering Heights for children with an introduction by Hinton. [21] [22]
Film adaptations of The Outsiders (1983) and Rumble Fish (1983), both directed by Francis Ford Coppola, established the careers of many film stars, such as Rob Lowe, Matt Dillon, Ralph Macchio, Tom Cruise, Diane Lane, Emilio Estevez, Patrick Swayze, C. Thomas Howell, and Mickey Rourke. Also adapted to film were Tex (1982), directed by Tim Hunter, and That Was Then... This Is Now (1985), directed by Christopher Cain.
Hinton herself acted as a location scout, and she had cameo roles in three of the four films. She plays the nurse in Dally's room for The Outsiders. In Tex, she is one of the teachers. She appears as a prostitute propositioning Rusty James in Rumble Fish.
The only film script adaptation Hinton wrote of her own work was for Rumblefish.[23]
Hinton states that she is a private person who is not comfortable talking about her personal life. She has revealed, however, that she enjoys reading (Jane Austen, Mary Renault, F. Scott Fitzgerald[24]), writing, taking classes at the local university, and horseback riding.[25]
She currently resides in Tulsa, Oklahoma with her husband David Inhofe, a software engineer,[26] whom she married in the summer of 1970[27] after meeting him in her freshman biology class at college.[28] In August 1983,[29] they became parents to Nicolas David Inhofe, who has worked a sound effects recordist on the movie Ice Age: The Meltdown.[30]
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