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John
R. Erickson, a former cowboy and ranch manager, is gifted with a storyteller's
knack for spinning a yarn. Through the eyes of Hank the Cowdog, a smelly,
smart aleck Head of Ranch Security, Erickson
gives readers a glimpse of daily life on a ranch in the West Texas Panhandle.
This series of books and tapes is in school libraries across the country;
has sold more then 6 million copies; is a Book-of-the-Month
Club selection; and, is the winner of the 1993 Audie for Outstanding Children's
Series from the Audio Publisher's Association. Publishers Weekly calls
Hank a "grassroots publishing phenomena," and USA Today says
this is "the best family entertainment in years."
The
road to stardom for Hank, however, wasn't all dog biscuits and gravy.
Erickson graduated from the University of Texas in 1966 and studied for
two years at Harvard Divinity School. He began to publish short stories
in 1967 while working full-time as a cowboy, farmhand, and ranch manager
in Texas and Oklahoma. Hank and his sidekick Drover are dogs Erickson
worked with on the range. This mixture of true life experience, fun, and
adventure has gained Hank a loyal following of thousands of children and
adults.
In
1982, however, Erickson was at his rope's end. "I was working out
in the cold; there was 8 inches of snow on the ground," he says,
"I had just gotten a couple of rejection slips from New York publishers;
and, I had a wife with two kids and another one on the way." So,
with $2000 in borrowed money, Erickson started his own publishing company,
appropriately named Maverick Books.
Hank
the Cowdog made his debut in the pages of The Cattleman, a
magazine for adults. An obvious favorite of readers, Erickson included
two of Hank's humorous stories in Maverick Book's first publishing effort,
The Devil in Texas (1982). Erickson began selling books
from his pickup truck at cattle auctions, rodeos, and just about any place
cowboys gathered.
When
Erickson started getting "Dear Hank" letters, he knew he was
onto something. So in 1983, 2,000 copies of The Original Adventures
of Hank the Cowdog were published, and sold out in 6 weeks. Not
long after that first printing, the book was recorded word-for-word on
audiotape. Since then, every Hank book has been recorded, making Hank
the longest running successful children's series on audio ever. (Source:
Billboard)
When
teachers began inviting Erickson to their schools, Hank found his most
eager fans. Teachers, librarians, and students alike love Hank. According
to some Texas Library Association surveys, Hank the Cowdog books
are the most popular selections in many library children's sections. The
lively characters make excellent material for reading and writing lessons,
and turn even the most reluctant readers into avid Hank-a-holics. When
used with the books, Hank tapes increase reading skills rapidly. In response
to popular demand from the growing bilingual market, the first two Hank
the Cowdog adventures are available in Spanish.
Erickson
was born in Midland, Texas. By the age of 3, he had moved with his family
to Perryton, Texas where he lives today with his wife, their youngest
son, and a dog named Sophie, on their very own ranch. His advice to young
writers is, "Write about something you know. Try to leave your readers
better off than they were before."
Mr. Erickson joined then Texas Governor George W.
Bush at Govalle Elementary in Austin, Texas, to celebrate the Governor's
Reading Initiative program. The governor joined the crowd of students
and teachers to hear Erickson read from Hank's adventures, strum on his
banjo, and sing some cool cowdog tunes. The goal of the Governor's Reading
Initiative is: "All students will read on grade level by the end
of grade 3 and will continue to read on grade level, throughout their
schooling." Governor Bush says, "Reading is to the mind what
food is to the body. Nothing is more basic or more essential. And in this
administration nothing is going to take a higher priority."
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