Jump to content

Sahara Sunday Spain: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Removing from Category:African-American women writers now in subcat using Cat-a-lot
per head
Tag: Reverted
Line 12: Line 12:


Spain was featured in a variety of international news media including: ''[[The Early Show]]'' with [[Bryant Gumble]], The [[PBS]] affiliate [[KQED (TV)|KQED]]'s ''[[Spark (TV program)|Spark]]'', ''[[To Tell the Truth]]'', and the French station TF1, ''[[Drôle de petits champions]]''. She was also featured in ''[[The New York Times Magazine]]'', ''[[The Guardian]]'', the ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'', ''[[The Oakland Tribune]]'', ''[[Time for Kids]]'' and the May 28, 2001 issue of the French magazine ''[[OH LA!]]''
Spain was featured in a variety of international news media including: ''[[The Early Show]]'' with [[Bryant Gumble]], The [[PBS]] affiliate [[KQED (TV)|KQED]]'s ''[[Spark (TV program)|Spark]]'', ''[[To Tell the Truth]]'', and the French station TF1, ''[[Drôle de petits champions]]''. She was also featured in ''[[The New York Times Magazine]]'', ''[[The Guardian]]'', the ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'', ''[[The Oakland Tribune]]'', ''[[Time for Kids]]'' and the May 28, 2001 issue of the French magazine ''[[OH LA!]]''

When she will emerge, if ever, is as yet unclear.


==Published books==
==Published books==

Revision as of 23:50, 26 April 2023

Sahara Sunday Spain is an emerging writer[clarification needed] born in California in 1991.

Her mother is the contemporary artist-photographer Elisabeth Sunday and her father, Johnny Spain, is a former Black Panther and convicted murderer.[1] Spain published her first book with HarperSanFrancisco when she was only 9 years old, becoming one of America's youngest published authors to have a monograph. The book contains 61 poems illustrated with her drawings made between the ages of 5 and 8 years old.

Spain was featured in a variety of international news media including: The Early Show with Bryant Gumble, The PBS affiliate KQED's Spark, To Tell the Truth, and the French station TF1, Drôle de petits champions. She was also featured in The New York Times Magazine, The Guardian, the San Francisco Chronicle, The Oakland Tribune, Time for Kids and the May 28, 2001 issue of the French magazine OH LA!

When she will emerge, if ever, is as yet unclear.

Published books

  • If There Would Be No Light: Poems From My Heart (Hardcover) 2001

References

  1. ^ "The 9-Year-Old Poet with the Big Advance".